Newspapers / The Courier (Asheboro, N.C.) / Jan. 24, 1924, edition 1 / Page 8
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THE A3HEB0RO COURIER, ASHEBORO. N. C. ,. --- ,Ta-dsy. Jsaaary. H m. DAIRY HINTS PLAN FOR MORE " 1 UVtOCK IX 1924 VALUABLE MAIL GROWTH OftUES OF HEIFERS Young Dairy' Animals Put Taroigh Throe Distinct Parioda Fd an Abundance. Breeders of dairy catfle commonly believe that the rate of growth of their stock la more or less uniform, but at a gradually decreasing rate aa the animals reach maturity. From the large amount of data available on the normal growth of dairy cattle, the Interesting and scientifically important fact that ths dairy heifer does not make a uniform gain In weight daring the growth period, but that the gains are made in spurts or cycles hag been discovered by the department of dairy husbandry of the Missouri College of Agriculture. It has been found that the dairy cow passes through at least three such cycles of growth. The first spurt or period of very rapid growth occurs before birth, during the fifth and sixth months. The second spurt of growth bedns about two months before birth Heifers Fed an Abundance Are En abled to Grow to Their Full Inherited Size. For the next thirty days the weaih er is likely to be bad. but the farmer need not be idle. He has been busy ail fall and winter seeding grain and fathering in last year's crops, hence I has not had time to seriously plan I what he will do next year. He can now calmly review the years work and see what mistakes he made last year and plan to avoid them this year. In summing up I think that he will find that taken as a whole last year was not so bad. Things were not al ways to our liking and prices seemed low and were, but at the same time we should be thankful that we have plenty to eat and plenty to feed our stock. This is more than can be said of many sections of the country to day. One crop or specialized farmers are now in a tight place. The grain farmer faced an over production crop last year. The tobacco farmer did the same, or at least a much larger crop than the previous year. And right here I wish to throw out a hint. From the present outlook every field and barn lot is going to be put in cotton this year. Cotton brought high prices last year, which is causing the farmers to plan for big acreage this year. You should think of this in planning your cotton crop this year, and at the same time I do not see why Randolph farmers should not be able to make good on this crop if anybody can, as we are not bothered with the boll weevil. I should say have not been so far. That is also a gamble this year. The weevil may hit us hard this year. These are things that we must take chances on. 1 Now in regard to plans for the year . 1924, I want to urge you to think se riously about adding more livestock this spring. Many of you have been putting out more grass and clover than ever before and will have the pasturage. Cream is bringing a good price and the skimmed milk will make the pigs Come. No other feed will put the growth on a pig that milk' will. Through feeding tests carried on all over the county last year toe found that by feeding our grain to hogs that we could get around $2.00 per bushel for it. This being the case why not plan to feed your corn this year. And right now is the time to be feeding .some of it. If you have any shoats that will grose around seventy-five to one hundred pounds you should be pushing them all they will stand for the March market. If you wish to have them put on a balanced ration, write me or call at the. office on Saturdays. This is im portant at this time and should be at tended to. Another thing that should be given attention at this season of the year is the chickens. Winter ee-es brinff A recent letter received by a maau- . . ,v. facturing firm-in Cedar Rapid, laj Two v-urg vomer, and one man from Germany had stamps attached were t in. to .iea..; near whkh cost 6,925,500,000 marks. The Rock Ark. last Monday mght An letter vas reinsured and is now on other .-up-i.t of the car managed u display at one of the banks in Cedar etapirrr Kapids and the letter u almost cov u p y y PEOPLE FROZE the State. Thla k aot trae-il can TO DEATH show my gentlemen in Raleigh, whose word will be received aay where, that I have never received one cent from the treasury of tike Can; aad ail that I hare-.received vac in the way of traveling expenses from Atlanta, I an .not working for money, and , I am already several dollars short U the way of expense. ered with stamps, leaving just enough space for the address. One of the bank officials says that before the war the stamps would have cost $1, 731,375,000 ia American money. SOPHIA ROUTE 1 NEWS it :ie main rugniy i aistano- t ut nig conwuou ia uu - sidereJ M-rious. The three young peo ple fe in an automobile on their way to l ittle Rock when the xero weather ercame them. The dead are. Mi Annie Mae Bailey, of Lit tle R .rk. Miss Dorey Woods, and Ernot Mann, of Little Rock. Rev. J. C. Allen preached an able Hope Sunday. Misses Blanche Davis Edwards spent Sunday of High Point, sermon at New C ard of Thanks. We inh to express heart felt thanks through the columns of The and Cora Courier to our many friends in Ran ftmoon dleman and surrounding community with friends in High Point. for the needs or Kindness snown us Marlboro and Sophia school boys during the sickness and death of our ! played .ball Friday afternoon. The dear little, son Uoyo. we also ap- score was a to in lavor oi Man- "lc . boro. each one Messrs. Bingham and Morgan were Mr. and Mrs. tddie joruison visitors on Sophia Route 1, Sunday, j Kandleman, is. Mi. v;Ison Robbing spent SaiuiJav night with his sister, Mrs. W. M. JUDGE H. A. GRADY MAKES Thomas, at High Point. , PUBLIC HIS CONNECTION and ends about four And one-half months after birth. It ii believed that the time between these two growth cycles Is a critical period and there is considerable danger of abortion at this time about the seventh month. The third period of rapi growth be the, best prices, but the old hens will rlru uhi.ut l4 mnntVia oft or hlrth unri HOt laV Ullle.SS DrODeHv housed xnA ends about 26 months after birth. ieuy.ve ln.em 001 warrr quarters, Each of these spurts or C?$es oi J a balanced ration, and keep growth proceeds tittiSg jftfigl manner. The rapidity )fc growth In- dends. ? " creases until about the middle; of the Now'let me say once more, plan to cycle when the gain made r U i smost add Inore milk cows, more hogs and rapid, then it slowly dies down?, t more chickens for 1924. These are to The practical value of this Informs- consume the excess of feed made on tlon lies in feeding an abundance the farm, and also grow more feed when growth is naturally most rapid. I0 thra- Look the country over. Animals will thus be enabled to grow "e fellow that sticks to dairy cows, to tne.r full Inhered s.ze. ho, will always have HOME-RAISED HEIFERS BEST t& ASl pays business WITH KU KLUX KLAN Mr. N. E. Davis made a trip to High Point Friday. I A five-passenger. Overland car and (Continued from page 1) a fiy-pa.-enger FordCollided near Mv own attitude toward these peo- bunday afternoon. The r,u ; th.t f th Kimcmn nf Knrth cars were both badly damaged but Carolina, and I will not dignify the no one was seriously hurt. 'matter bv makimr further denial of Mrs. W. S. Beeson spent Saturday tk tv,t uaa Kn m.Ho night with her son, Mr. Elmer Beeson. . ThOSe who have observed me unon buccess to The Courier and its h-y, .h nnt iwv wit many readers. Ifriendlv eve. tell the world whether vnr.n , c or not I have ever been unfair to a 'Jews, the Negroes and the Catholics re- whn hnvp nnnpnrpil hforA me t 1 1 Mrs. A. W. Davis's condition mains about the same; we hope for their own story ner a speedy recovery. I I am willing to leave it to them Elcana Wall, an aged citizen of to say whether or not I am their near Cedar Sruare, was quietly laid friend or their enemy. But the Klan to rest in Old Union cemetery Fn- is FIGHTING unrestricted immigra day; mL , , . tior; the Klan IS FIGHTING every- wr. M. Thomas and daughters, Irene thing that is un-American, everything and Clara were visitors in this section that is unlawful, everything that is baturday. immoral : and it obiects most serenu- 1 , . , U A II .. .. . J . 1 J? TTJ 1. . ' . . . . I . nciciiuoii Aitcit aiiu lixuuiy ui nign Point, attended meeting at New Hope bunday. ously to the manipulation of the im migration laws by designing men who are seeking cheap labor, and who are H. W. Robbins spent Saturday unmmHfni r,f ih v.a v, .i; nigni wun relatives at tlign foint. FACES FIRING SQUAD Generally Develop Into Better More Profitable Cows Than Those Purchased. and COLERIDGE NEWS nary immigrant is Bolshevic at heart 'and can never be assimilated and ' Americanized through any process IN UTAH yet discovered. And some day we will wake up to a gastly realization ' Omer R. Woods, formerly Judge of this fact. North Carolina is com- and resident of Tennessee and Idaho paratively pure; but the North and who has been on trial at several West are already poisoned with courts in Utah for the murder of his Foreign influences as was so " well invalid wife, and attempting to burn demonstrated during the Great War. the. bed upon which her body .lay ! The Klan stands for right liv Woods stated that-he was absolutely ing, for law enforcement in ways innocent, but that he had no ill will that are lawful; for purity of con against the ones who convicted him. duct, especially in the home, for the "Fear is nothing to me", he said, "I sancity of womanhood, for charity am at peace with the world and will toward the weak and unfortunate, for walk to my death with a firm step, those things which are known and My wife knows -that I am innocent recognized everywhere as AMERI and if there' is a hereafter she will CAN those things which have given meet me". The Utah- state law per- to the citizen of the United States mits the condemned to choose be- a supremacy among men which must tween the noose and the firing squad,.be cherished, protected and preserved Woods,. seated in a stone chair faced forever; and in the work that we five unknown and hidden men. Four are doing, we invite the co-operation of- them fired -ball ammunition and all native, white American citizens, one fired a blank catridge. who believe in the tenets of the Christian Religion. We ask no others, Card of Thanks for we are Per 6e- a CHRISTIAN Compensation. We sincerely desire to thank our 1 have been criticized for receiv kind friends and good neighbors for ln a salary as Grand Dragon, and, the many acts of kindness during the "fc "lc Ba"lc "I,1B u,i,wul Py lrom illness oi our dear son, Alton. May the Lord bless and reward them. Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Cox, Seagrove, N. C. ivn YeBowTitJSof fr .nips lawAwValwO Now Ready! The Great Saving Event Annual White Sale is in progress, with the Greatest Values in History of Meyers White Sales Monday January 21st Opened the Important Occasion and daily new items of Economy inter est will be added to the offerings For your Consideration and Advantage , Of tremendous significance on every woman's shopping calendar (and the man's too, for that matter) is the great White -Sale, an annual feature of the store probably never before have we been able to present such a great range of outstanding' money saving pos sibilities as we planned for you in this , greater sale now ready and awaiting your buying participation. ' jf, 1 ? Come to GreensKorb - Secure your year's supply of these most attractive merchandise offerings now awaiting you! Messrs. J. M H. T. and Zim Cave- ness, of Aslicboro, were visitors in The grent Importance of raising town Saturday, dalrv onl vps from the best cows In A play, "Son of John" was given the herd Is recognized, Except under here Saturday night by the Bennett special conditions It costs less to raise SiTi helfors than It doe to buy cowl, and MSam Brady and children left the bnme-ralsed helferg generally de- Sunday after spending several days velop Into better and more profitable with her sisteri Mrs. C. H. Caveness. cows thnn most of those which can be - Mr. and Mrs. Lonnie Phillips, and purchased. There la much less danger family, of Putman, spent the week from contagious diseases tnch as end with his sister, Mrs. R. H. Brady, tuberculosis and abortion, when , Mr. W. F. Hunsucker of The Cou caKes are raised Instead of being pur. ricr force, was a visitor in town last weeK. I Mrs. Florence Cheek, of Bennett Route 1, moved her family here last NEWS IN BRIEF chase from unknown ourcea. RATION FpR ORDINARY COWS week. ' The people here mouirs over the Corn 8lla0 Alfalfa Hay, Commeal d th of w H Strickland, in and Ground Oat Ara Among Necesaary Faade. Greensboro last Wednesday. Mr. Strickland was for several years pas- tor of Deep River Baptist church It requires a ration of 35 ponoda of here, and was loved by all who came pafb Ham. 12 nounda of alfalfa hay. in cor.Ue wi'.h l:,irt. 8 pounds of commeal, of ground oats per ordinary cow to produce 8.250 pounds of milk a year. Reducing It to 80 povndf of corn all age, 8 pounds of al falfa hay, with grain the same as be fore, 8 pounds of cornmeal, and 3 pounds of (round oats, would reduce the milk to 5,500 pounds. and 2 pound Messrs. t,. w. ana a. m, rooie da for an made a business trip to Erect last w nniiy. appointment at the Baptist church Sunday at 11 and 7:20. YOUNG RESUMES OPERATIONS The house military affairs com mittee took up the question of dis posing of the government's Muscle Shoals project last Tuesday. Bids of Southern Power Company on lease of the plants for 50 years at a rental of $100,000,000 and of Henry Ford, which he informed Chairman Kahn last week, "still stands" formed the basis of the committee's hearing. Sixteen cars of sodatol have been bought by co-operating farmers in I thirteen counties, reports Assistant j Director J. M. Gray who handled this . project for the State College and De-1 partment oi Agriculture. New Washington Memorial Glenn Young; who -was recently ac quitted in Williams county, 111., court on a charre of assault with a deadly MOVE RETAINED AFTERBIRTH. weapon, has agate resumed opera- j tions against bootleggers and moon- . , - .. a i jj ' nhiners In Williams county, 111. Mr. r?Z - W0 member, of the OtoMd Organ Beutned ' aftorblrth , oft on , t oDowt BB4erf eedlng. i well-fed cows it M Bsoally an todlcarioa of diseased geni tal ergaaa,- It U oftsa aseocUtad wltfl conUgloos abottJoft. OIv ft warn bran mash coopt Chotirs'fts ealvtag, keep tho-eow wsnnen4 ffin er a physio if too afterbirth et cobm ftwaf roadUy. If tt Mt torn sway la aboot stx feewt at tack ft two-poud welgnt t ft "' - "Weke4 WW sy.r"- - "vTaen ft heifer, at tar first freshe. . lag t lean ttaa two years, wtn pro- dsce more that twice S' moch mti the ftTerage mature cows a tae alnr berds" of the country, there 1s no doobtntist It pays to hare puro- trod bull st the head of the herd. '' ' Vo-tilatteo Ple-egsrded."''(:'f' J afany dairymen dlsregsrd veotlla Mo. PTme bams are built Ughtty i- t. T iTrdge cow rtealm ; r ; ciuic rt of air per Rdaotr Ku Klux Klan against violators of the prohibition law. In one of their recent raids 40 bootleggers and seven stills were eapturea. , ..; IN MEMORY fee BMamAS-i a... Iv .k-.. tu ass iuvi v vj u i iiupjii Isaiah Lucas, aged 72 years who died January , 1934. . Gone from earth, oh our dear father; To our home he will eome no more, lis has crossed the mystic rhrer: 'He has gained the heavenly shore. Father, we' miss 70a, we miss you, , v here below; , . 1 ' 'But we hope to meet you on that land beyond the ehore, 1-'. MARGARET IXNG,- HONOR. ROLL Oak Following i the honor roU of uledo School: .- - , . , First Grade Myrtle Chriaco, Com Chrkeo, Charlie Chrises, Second Crade-aatherme WaU. Third Grade Bertha ChHsco. Fifth Crsde Robert Walk ' Teacher fairy Maness.- '. J r' r 1 loene St the reoent eorneretona.sy. Ins of the Oeoros Waenlotoi Mseonle Memorial st ; Alessadrlav Vs. a fr. dent Coolitfoe used the trowel teed by Washington when ho- laid the come stone of the Capitol hulldlnf In Wsen tngtott, O, C ',. v-' " ""' .' t V be 'cured" Fert ili'zer.aiiiist ii Great bins of Rovater Fartili v "mm? PERHAPS you didn't know that ferti lizer should be "cured" or "aged", in order that the food for soil can be more readily available when that food is needed. 'K This is one of the details of the ferti lizer industry that few people know, but it's mighty important. Such "details" as this represent the difference between Royster's Fertilizer and leas carefully pre pared foods and the difference between profitable crops and crops that are not so profitable. To keep vast quantities of fertilizer for months represents n enormous supply and tremendous capital. " Therefore, only a large company like Royster's can offer this more effective "cured fertilizer. Great bina oi 1 or aae or month ao that your re sults from its use will swell the ewrniasa from your land. Rid yourself of the idea that all ferti lizer is alike. This is no more true than that all land is alike. The truth of this -can be proven-root, alone by the enthusiastic prsise of success- ' ful farmers who have used jRoyster's. 6ut, by your own experience. f Jk- r Use Royster's this year. Gve it fair test and don t guess about fertilizer any more.-. i - I. Crow better and larger 'crops by using - ! fertilizer that has been ''cured' that ia free from lumps that, has beesT proven ; chemically correct by forty chemute-and that has established - a record for eooxl4 '; works over a Ion period of.yeati, i Look v f for the Mne ,TOySTl-R''. onUai bar.., F. S, R.OYSTER CUANO C0X. ''7 T .ATLANTA j MONTCOMEPTf" '- ' '''''' " ?' osw ' ' ' m cdjcrtiftcrs JL
The Courier (Asheboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 24, 1924, edition 1
8
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