Newspapers / Polk County News and … / July 26, 1923, edition 1 / Page 8
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FRIENDS NOTICED IMPROVEMENT i Wonderful Results f rom Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Beloit,Wis.? "My female trouble was brought on by overwork. I had worked ~ ? in stores and had to do heavier work than my strength could stand, and had to be on my feet most of the time. Finally I had to give up this work entirely ana stay at home. Doc tor s medicine did not give me much relief, and my mother wanted me to take . Lydil E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. I took a couple of bottlesof it and thought it did not help ms as much as it should, so I gave it up to try something else. Nothing I took helped, me much, so I finally decided to give the Vegetable Compound another trial and to take enough of it to make sure it would help me. I have taken it over a year now and it has brought wonder ful results. I have gained from 93 to 110 pounds and am keeping house now. My friends all notice ike change in my health. I will be glad to answer all letters that women write to me about the Vegetable Compound. Mrs. W. G. Monson, 1515 Park Ave.,Beloit,Wis. Mrs. Monson is willing to write to any woman suffering from such troubles. ~~ GREEN MOUNTAIN ' ASTHMA COMPOUND quickly relieves the distress ing: paroxysms. U f?ed for 55 years and result of long experience in treatment oi throat and lung diseases by Dr. J. 4. Guild. FREE TRIAL BOX, Treatise on Asthma, its causes, treatment, etc., sent upon request. 25<\ and Sl.OC *L druggists. J. H. 3UILD CO., RUPERT, VT. For over 50 years it has been the household remedy for all forms of It is a Reliable, General Invig orating Tonic. Malaria Chills and Fever Dengue Don't hide skin troubl e-healit with Resinol No amount of cosmetics can con ceal an ugly stin. They only fill in the pores and make the condi tion worse. Kesinol Soap cleanses the pores, giving them a chance to breathe and throw oft impurities. This is why when used with Rdsi nol Ointment it rids the skin o? embarrassing defects, Keeping it so elear and fresh it can hardly help being beautiful. At all druggiitt. Good to the last drop should say it is ! M I could tell a cup of Maxwell House blindfolded. What else could have such H aroma, suck flavor, jjj such uniformity! MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE ftOLO RAM JO TAUGHT. Orchestra and fin playing. N? music. Book postpaid fl Address DBNHAH, CEDAR CREEK, NEB Real Metning of Term "Spoils" Not Understood The real meaning of the term j "sports," as applied tp fowls, is not ! quite understood by a good many poultry keepers.' Now/ in breeding many varieties there will often come a chicken that is contrary to the parent 'birds, and the reason for tlds sometimes seems very strange. For example, those who have bred Silver Laced Wyandottes know that frequently a xthite one, arid tveasion - ally a black one, will be produced, ? and it was the breeding t< . iher of these so-called sports - that gave the two distinct colors, the Win..? , Wyandotte and the Mack Wyandotte, as we know them today. Wliere very lightly laced birds are used there is a greater Kn '? ncy to white, and just the opposit* .vhen a very heavily laced bird is i:.;ed, the sport here coming black. Partridge Wyandottes will also throw a few white ones, and those who breed them in big Quantities will produce perhaps four or tive white ones dur ing the year. i Another common example of "sports" is found in the fact that oftentimes j a rose. comb breed will throw a single comb fowl. There is always an ocia | sional tendency in this direction, and it does not prove that t lie parent j stock is bad, nor that it does nt* measure up to the required purebred ? standard. Many of our present-day breeds are t.ae results of working from sports. The Mack Plymouth came first from the barred, and for ; years no one ever heard of a male ' chicken coming black, these being all > females. Tocay we have a distinct j breed known as the Illack Hock. , It is probable that all of our more than a hundred modern varieties of . poultry descended from the one kind j of original jungle fowl. In fact, most of our now numerous varieties have (been created during the past 40 or 50 years. The old breeds, like the Black I.angshans, do n# ?L often pro duce sports, for the reason that -they have been bred pure for many liun J dro'ls of years, perhaps for thou sands of years. Hut modern breeds, | such as the Orpingtons, Khode Island j Reds, etc., are given to producing I spoits. Movable Roosting Coops I Good for Young Fowls J # When the chicks are old enough to j leave the brood coops and when they I are weaned from broody hens or brood | ers, they grow' so rapidly that they 1 need more room. To i^eet this re quirement, poultrymen itse what are known as roosting coops. These are structures about six feet long. three feet wide, three feet high in front and two feet higli the rear. They have 1 waterproof roofs, but the front side and one end, or the front side and two ends, are covered with wire so that the air can circulate through freely In warm weatJier, bnt hostile animals cannot get in. To keep out driving rains or for use in cooler weather, particularly when j the chicks are tirst put in and the nights are chilly, curtains of cloth or burlap are attached to the tops of the open sides so that they can be rolled down and fu stoned to protect the chicks whpn necessary. The curtain covering eact side is made separate from the oth^ra so that much or little space may be ieft open according to requirements and according to which way the wind ^>lows or the storm drives. TheS little buildings should be mov able and it is a good plan to place them on skids with rounded ends so that they can be dimvn from place to place, thus affording a fresh, new location ev ery day or two. Many poultry keep ers block up th^se little houses so that there is * space between the floor and the ground which affords a co<jl, shady place for the chicks during hot days. Poultry Notes llll 4^1 Don't crow,* ; better sell some of the birds and make room. ? ? * . When lice come into the hen house, profit usually goes out. ? * ? Lively chicks come from the eggs laid by hens of good breeding and vi tality. * * * A hen that will lay during the fall shows her persistence and vulue as a good producer. * * * Ducklings need plenty of fresh wa rer In dislies deep enough for them to wash their eyes and nostrils. * * ? Oatmeal and buttermilk, either fresh or in the dried form, are two of the best developers for growing chicks. ? * ? The warm-weather chick is not of so robust a type, as a rule, as the early one, the parent stock often be ing run down and less vigorous. * * * Vigorous breeding stock is the , first essential for healthy chicks, but some t times when a good start is made, neglect and in^roper care work havoc. * ? ? Duck eggs and ducklings are more readily available, and about 20 cents apiece Is a fair price for fresh eggs. Ducklings can be ihlpped fairly sue cessfully. f Frocks of Knitted Fabric; f Dresses for Little Girls j I tf----?" ARE you casting about for the ideal gown for gunimer wear? Some thing refreshingly cool, yet not of the lingerie type, a frock that Is apropos for any occasion, being dressy, yet not so Jressy but that it Is suited to the time and the place; a dress that "looks like new" at e'very wearing? For ihose who have had the good for tune or forethought to acquire one of the ultra smart mod<|s fashioned of some one or the other of the new knitted fabrics, "dreams have come true." 'Just because knitted textiles are so likable, not only are we catering to our fondness for them in that our trancing girdle are points of Interest In this costume. An outcome for the fashions fof knit ted fabrics is the overbjouse and jacquette made thereof. Even newer are; the short loose coats of knitted yardpge, which are so aptly finished In sflk braid or bound with inch-wide self fabric. .. v The vogue of embroidery for the dress-up frocks of the very little miss is one that continues year after year. No other adornment seems to be quite so in keeping with the dainty materials and simple lines ?>f youthful garments, and consequently the styles in summer dresses for 19-3, being no nrrwm'. ^ Two Smart Styles loveliest summer frocks are being created therefrom, but rumor has it that fabrics of this genre will be very fashionable tills fall. ? Just now interest centers about white midsummer, frocks made of knit ted fabric, for the solid white en semble Is registered as the style <ie luxe for the moment. The accompany ing picture illustrates two smart styles which owe their attr.-Ktiveness to the handsome knitted textiles from which thet are created. The one to the right is made from drop-stitch tricosham. and exquisite In Knitted Frocks. I exceptions to this rule, feature em broidery in many new and Interesting uses. In the little white voile !>nrty dress illustrated below. French 4 knots are used to tinish the neck and sleeves. Fancy ^mocking at the front and back adds an attractive touch. Around the hem of the skirt is a garland of tiny flowers embroidered io French knots in pinK, yellow and blue. Colorful needlework is also being extensively used on nursery frocks of tine gingham, cotton crepe and black sateen. On these the decorative de White Voile Party Dress. knitted fabric featuring the- openwork effect which is quite the rage this sea son. The open stitch being in stripes, gives chance for clever play in com bining horizontals with verticals. No tice the novel sleeves. The companion rrock in the picture takes on more of n tailored aspect in that it is developed from 'the plain tricosham, which is ?jo firmly knit that it- becomes as a rl(?h, heavy, silk lined material. However, it is truly a knitted fabric possessing all the vir tues of being cool, just elastic enough to conform to grace, and for durable wear it has no peer. Plaited skirt/ buttons- "adroitly placed, and ^a-H en signs are amusing. Animals, toys or familiar t-gures from fairv tales arc embroidered, or appliqued, to orna ment these otherwise very plain little garments. Dressier models are also colorful but use fine embroidered bou quets or garlands' of fruits and flow ers. Little taffeta dresses are shown with large rosettes or frills of till same material abyut the skirt, the center of each rosette being made oJ tiny silk flowers. (Q, 1923. Western Newspaper L'Qion.) J ? FARM LIVESTOCK Prosperity of Farming Depends on Live Stock j Live stock provides an outlet for three-fifths of the crop acreage in the United States, besides 65,000,000 acres of Improved pasture, 150,000,000 acres of unimproved grass laid pasture, 17f>, (XX), 000 acres of woodlmi pasture, and r?00,000,000 acres of gracing land In the a-id and semi-arid siWlons of the j West, according to C. W. McCamphell, J head of the department of animal hus- I bandry at Kansas State Agricultural j college. All told, live stock furnished ! an outlet for SO per cent of the total food and feed produced by tame 'and wild vegetation in the United States. Live stock, by utilizing advanta- ! geously and efficiently the various pas- I 1 ture and forage crops, makes possible ' a system of crop rotation that aids ma j terlally in maintaining soil fertility and ' controlling plant diseases, insects and ! weeds. j Live stock provides, In the form of manure, the most reliable and practi cal fertilizer that can be used to main tain soil fertility. The production of [ grain takes from the soil large amounts of phosphorus, potash and nitrogen. When grain is sold off the farm where produced these elements of fertility are completely lost, but when grain Is fed to live stock 80 per cent of the phosphorus, potash and nitrogen is re turned to the soil hft the form of ma nure. Manure also adds to the soil that necessary constituent hufrus which commercial fertilizers do n<*t. Salt, Lime and Iodine Needed in Stock Rations "Salt, iodine and calcium are needed 1 in every well-balanced live stock ra tion," declared E. B. Hart of the agri cultural chemistry department, Univer- ; sity of Wisconsin. "Salt is an essential factor in a well balanced ration," declared Mr. Hart. I When used it is usually in the form of j ordinary salt or sodium chloride. The chlorine upon entering the stcmach | forms hydrochloric acid, and this acid j is necessary for prbper and complete : digestion. The animal with a rough ened coat is one which Is not receiving proper nutrition, and this improper nu trition may sometimes be traced to a ftck of salt In the ration. "Nearly all common foodstuffs are very low In Iodine content," sa'.d Mr. Unit. "The greatest loss resulting from a deficiency of iodine is In the birth of hairless pigs. The goiter region of this country is in the Northwest and It Is In this section that high losses are in curred. The fact that It has Dot put in an appearance on your farrt does not necessarily mean that it never will. And a little iodine in the form cf sodi um or potassium Iodide will serve as an insurance, against trouble of this type. ? "Calcium is being given off constant ly In the form of salts in the milk of a dairy cow, and some provision must be made to replace this, rt has been found that alfalfa hay cured under caps carries a vitamine which aids In calcium assimilation. Lime or bone meal added to the roughage will also help to overcrme the constant drain on the calcium supply of the body." ' Combinations Outlined for Production of Pork "Why fatten hogs with corn and wheat when each of the following 1 combinations will produce 100 pounds j of pork?" Is the pertinent question i when reading over the following feed ; !ng summary made by Professor F.leldsted of the Oregon Agricultural college : 1. 470 pounds barley, ground. 2. 400 pounds barley, ground, plus 20 pounds digester tankage. 3. 332 pounds barley, grourrd, plus 350 pounds skim milk or buttermilk. 4. 2-40 pounds barley, ground, plus 123 pounds middlings, plus 220 pounds buttermilk or skim milk. 5. 236 pounds barley, ground, -plus 118 pounds middlings, plus 511 pounds garbage. , 6. 320 pounds barley, ground, plus 100 pounds middlings. 7. 252 pounds barley, ground,1 plus 126 pounds middlings, plus 30 pounds digester tankage. 8. 209 pounds barley, ground, plus 200 pounds middlings, plus 20 pounds digester tankage. \ : 1 ? Good Feeds for Growing Pigs or the Brood Sow A mixture of 60 per cent barley and 40 per cent oats will be a good mix ture for growing pigs or brood sows This mixture would be* improved upon by making it 40 per cent barley, 3(1 per cent oats, 20 per cent middlings, and 10 per cent tankage. For fatten Ing pigs a ration of 00 per cent barley and- 10 per cent tankage or 60 per cent barley, 30 per cent mid dlings, and 10 per cent tankag^ will be four 1 satisfactory. Growth and Development of Pigs Must Ue Rapid The pigs should be fed grain and finished as early as possible if the pork is to be economically produced Growth and development of pigs should be . rapid If the bacon , is to be profitable. A little neglect at this critical season may retard the growtt m pigs. When the pigs are to b? finished they may*be confined in pens unless there Is a, luxuriant pasture whence plenty of grain may be fed Now Is the i There's n. feeling ash v ,, ? doubin str rv: these huim-l) Simply g,..: druggist ami t morning ar. 1 . H the worst fr?*<V while the !i>;ht. tirely. It Is s ounce ia nee,.-, skin ami gain a lie sure to a Othine, as thi? money back if "^oCetRj u8jy Spou )?ar f. ;J(*I un? .. ? . i ?Wjy ,;,jra th?V ^ . to r,- .u,^l aim*; - ? i for I**. ,8('- ! W4tri5 .0 r?a Su? *"' Bpni,|? Tn?iUt yJI Children ? Reiol*ttr. |?Jj, ' "jjl Guaranteed DoB-nircBtif MRS. W'HSIOW'J The Iniinti' ?B<J Children grow h.-alUiy from colic.di&rrhfx*. * constipation ar rf other trwkuJ' LTiven it at teething tin* Safe. plea?ar:t? aiwavi brinm* markalile and gratifyia-J!* At Aii 7J Druggists ' Iti TOO LATE Death only a matter of sta Don't wait until pains oil become incurable diseasa painful consequences by I LATHROP'S S CAPSULES The world's standard remedffcfl liver, bladder and uric acidtntifl National Remedy of HoIlaadiJ Guaranteed . Three sues, all H Lo<k for the name Cold MtMfl box and accept no iraiUtU Skin TrouhJ toothed ~1 With CuticiJ Soap 25c, Ointment 25 ud 1 ?ours. *iri|ia " Y' w'.r^Ain? Ask your druggist- irrftd .< r ? from Reform Dispensary. 1 mi The Girl I Lo?. Several days ;i^<> city, eamo into dollar bill, wifli r !i?* fvllowpf tion nfutly tyiifu riltcn "J his is in \ f 1 - r it to the ^irl I b>vr. Mr. Ha II is of the real "human inr? r? >i" i"r some budding Ht-nr} necessary tart ;in?l modern lover. remark* News. I Parting with wis* 1 circunistance winVh ni-M' f ra u^r)i t with tra-iV v--'n time, and In I h is ??use i Iv so. Hut. of eoiir-f. "di Jiave been his to* may have f"r rj^' next day may have pay day. W'fi^ fcD'??'$ t!"' Some one docs ! i i (lood intent i< !> u ' start with neu old. tl);in try
Polk County News and The Tryon Bee (Tryon, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 26, 1923, edition 1
8
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