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Events in the Lives of Little Men
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RERRES )
CHARLTON COUNTY HERALD
Mac Is Staying I.at'e»
Find Pure-Bred
Cows Now Excel
4 3
L W
Surpass Grades in Most
"Economical Production of
F ~ Butterfat and Milk.
f’f’revared by ths United States Department
i of Agriculture.)
. The statement 1s sometimes made
I’~’~thghat grade dairy cows produce as
Umuch milk and butterfat per cow as
pure breds. Even when it is admit
ted that pure breds produce more than
| grades, it is sometimes claimed that
the grades produce more economically.
-f"éuch eonclusions, according to Dr. J,
-, McDowell, dziry husbandman of the
United States Department of Agricul
‘ure, have as a rule been based on
| geperal observations or on a compara-
V;fively small number of records.
. " Pure Breds Excel Grades.
' As a matter of fact, after compariny
(the records of 29,397 pure-bred cows
and 71,745 grades in dairy-herd-im
provement associations, Doctor Me-
Dowell finds that these pure breds ex
elledythe grades in both production
and in income over cost of feed by
7 to 10 per cent., The results of this
study are discussed in Circular 26-C,
l“Comparison of Pure Bred and Grade
Dairy Cows,” just issued by the de
partment.
On an average, in one year the pure
breds of all ages ate $14.52, or 23 per
cent, worth of feed more per cow than
‘rthe grades. They produced 10.6 per
- ¢ent more milk and 6.7 per cent more
‘ butterfat than the grades, and in year
fly income over cost of food they ex
eelled the grades by 9.7 per cent, or
$8.66 per cow.
} Closer Culling in Grades.
} The record showed that the purae
Fhreds, on the average, excelled the
grades in milk production until the
age of thirteen years, in butterfat pro
duction until the age of eleven ycars,
and in income over cost of feed per
cow until the age of eleven years, Aft
er these ages the grades slightly ex
celled the pure breds. Doctor McDow
ell attributes this to the praciice of
closer culling in grade herds than in
oure-bred herds. It is obvious thst
culling out the low producers from
the grade herds Is largely responsible
for only producers reaching the aged
group. In pure-bred herds, however.
culling is not so genrerally practiced
on a production busis, Close culling
is practiced in, grade herds but the
pure-bred herd is improved largely
through breeding.
Owners of either sort can draw a
from these facts, says Doctor
[¢Dowell, Closer culling uw
pure-bied herds antl better breeding
J§ essential in grade herds.
y A copy of the circular may be ob
tained from the United States Depart
ment of Agriculture, Washington, D. C.
Right Breeding Stock
Is Important Factor
One of the first.essentials of profit
able hog production is good hogs. The
breed selected does not make so much
difterence, but it is fundamentally im
portant to obtain good individuals. for
the foundation stock, writes Edgar
Martin, in the Prairie Farmer. A gcod
beginning pays in future years.
Sows should be bred for two litters
a year, each sow raising five or more
pigs per litter. The pigs should be
farrowed in February or March for
spring and August or September for
fall litters. The spring pigs should go
to market the following September or
October and the fall pigs during the
following March or April,
Good feeding and care will be re
quired to send good pigs to market
welghing 200 pounds or more, as early
as September or April. It will pay,
however, since after October and
April the price may be expected to
decline.
For most profitable results, except
what is desired for breeding stock,
hogs should be full-fed from farrow
fng until sent across the scales to
market. :
iAgncultural Squibs g
Neglect rather than use puts most
farm machinery In the Junk pile,
. "0
Soy beans and soy-bean bhay are
high protein feeds, and are being
raised in many sections, especially by
dairymen.
.9 9
Half an hour's time each year, be
gldes the risk of a broken plowpoint,
18 the cost of each boulder left in the
flelds uncer cultivation,
; 'S 9
Late bhatched chickens will bring
}nr’ little money from the sale of eggs
next winter and they are always the
4irst ones to get any disease that may
be In the flock. .
; ; L
It 18 8 good practice to seed rape In
the corntield at the time of the last
cultivation, perhaps two or three
pounds per acre seeded broadeast by
‘hand or with a seeder,
| 52
L “Rape sown at the rate of five
pounds per acre will make a good hog
pasture. Oats and peas make good
rh pasture, but usually not so good
as rupe.
S
. “Phe Purdue station foand that due
o larger yields the silage grown on
one &cre planted with ensilage corn
produced approximately one-fourth
more milk and butterfat than the
M : t of land planted to feld
Bean Diseases and
Control Measures
Simple Rules Will Obviate
Loss While in Transit.
(Prepared by the United States Department
of Agriculture.)
Four simple rules that will obviate
much of the loss to snap beans in tran
sit appear in a leaflet just issued by
the United States Department of Ag
riculture as Miscellaneous Publication
16-M, “Save the Beans,” The rules
are:
-1, Pick beans, if practicable, when
the vines are dry. Beans packed dry
are not so likely to decay as .wet ones.
Moreover, picking beans and cultivat
ing fields when the beans are wet
favor the spread of such diseases as
blight and anthracnose.
2. Sort the beans, Spread them on
canvas or burlap racks, then discard
all those showing blemishes or wounds
of any kind. These blemishes are
usually caused by decay-producing or
ganisms which develop rapidly in con
tainers. Insect-injured and broken
beans should be removed, since they
provide an opportunity for the en
trance of organisms which cause de
cay. These blemishes and wounds fre
quently originate in the field while the
beans are still on the vine,
3. Keep the harvested beans out of
the sun and rain while awaiting trans
portation. Decay is more rapid when
the beans are warm in the presence of
abundant moisture. Wet beans in a
container dry slowly, if at all. They
are likely to get warmer rather than
cooler.
4. Keep the beans cool.
The leaflet also lists six common
bean diseases (anthracnose, bacterial
blight, mosaie, powdery mildew, root
rot, and rust), briefly gives the chiet
symptoms, sand the available measures
for control, “Nesting” diseases are
briefly mentioned.
The leaflet may be proecured by ap
plying to the Department of Agricul
ture, Washington, D. C.
Useful Type of Calves
for Making Baby Beef
Calves to qualify as baby beef must
have quality and finish, The consumer
does not want the unfinished year
ling, and the calf that does not have
quality will not take on a high finish.
Neither will the calf lacking in early
maturing qualities fatten during the
latter part of the feeding period, but
instead it will use most of the feed
which it consumes for growth. Keep
ing this in mind, the feeder should
first determine whether his calves are
zagd enough to compete on the fat
{enrllag”‘ market, and if he Jecides
that they are not, they should be fin
ished off on coarser feeds for a later
market.
The wide, deep-bodied, thick-fleshed
calf with shert legs and an abun
dance of quality as indicated by fine
ness of hair, texture of skin, smooth
ness of flesh, and general refinement
about the head and other parts of the
body is the type best suited for mak
ing prime baby beef, Uniformity in
size, weight, and color should not be
overlooked, because such factors are
an advantage in marketing.
Hog Pasture Rotation
Practiced in Illinois
In following out his sanitary hog
raising plan, Bert Kellogg of Kendall
county, Illinois, uses a five-year rota
tion, writes Earl Price in Farm
Life. Each field has spring wheat, or
some other spring-sown small grain,
followed hy two years of alfalfa, then
two years of corn. On this particular
farm each lot contains about five acres
und all are located near the barns so
that feed and water are convenient,
The first year, alfalfa is always
used as the “sanitary” pasture for
the spring pigs. Portable hoghouses
provide shade and shelter, and the
litters are moved out of the farrow
ing house to the pasture as soon as
weather permits,
The second year alfalfa is pastured
with cattle, Usually both erops of
corn are supplemented with soy beans
and “hogged off.,” In preparing for
the spring grain the second year corn
stalks are either plowed under or
thoroughly disked.
Mr. Kellogg finds that pasturing
with hogs and the use of alfalfa two
years out of the five, keeps his soll
high in fertility and organic matter,
Influence of Milk on
Production of Eggs
To demonstrate how milk solids af
fect egg production, Dr. Prince T.
Woods, In a recent article in the
Waverly Four poultry magazines, sug.
gosts this test: “When they are lay
ing freely, stop the milk entirely for
three days. The falling off in egg
yield following the stopping of milk
will be so abrupt that you will not
fail to notice It. Then begin again to
feed wilk freely and note how prompt.
ly the ege yield returns to the former
high tevel. . . . With ample milk a
good exg yield, with no milk a greatly
reduced egg yield," Dry skim milk Is
the ideal form of milk for poultry,
Individuality of Hens
Some hens have a lively, contented,
peaceful disposition, while others are
a 8 grouchy as old sin, Some hens will
complete a hateh and leave thelr
nests as clean as they were when
starting to hateh, and others will have
the nest all torn up and befouled, and
the eggs broken. Fowls are pecullar,
They have ncute sense of taste, sight
and hearing, but no scent. They are
of a Jealous disposition, and will »e
sent the intrusion of a strange ben,
afiln N T
JuLl nol bl
—
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound Strengthened Her
bt
Tlkhart, Tnd.—*l had a tired feel
fing and was unable to get out of bed
A without the help
R ! of my husband.
el | We heard of the
AP ) Vegetable Com
ge | pound and de
.. on.4@ | cided to try it.
g<< 2 | Tam still taking
oW it and it sure is
TowmloEß 1a Telp to me. I
g &) can do my work
s »,,.g' 21 without resting
geeesi ;g before lam
s 1 through. I know
s that if women
will give the Vegetable Compound a
trial they can overcome those tired
and worn-out feelings. I cannot ex
press the happiness I have received
and how completely it has made over
my home.”—Mgs. D. H. SIBeRT, 1326
Laurel St., Elkhart, Indiana.
LEES
No more Heartburn
For correcting over-acidity,nor
malizing digestion and quickly
relieving belching,gas,sourness,
heartburn, nausea and other di
gestivedisorders. Safe. Pleasant,
Normalizes Digestion and
Sweetens the Ereath
\ il
e ‘4& ) Imocsn
Q; q“) SB"_ELL'?NS
\@P=_| £ot wa er
t,." 2 ="| Sure Relief
BELI:ANS
FOR INDIGESTION
25¢ AND 75¢ PACKAGES EVERYWHERE
Grove’s
Tasteless
Chill Tomic
Restores Health, Energy
and Rosy Cheeks. ¢oc
For Foot Rot in Sheep and
Fouls in Hoofs of Cattle
Try Hanford’s Balsam of Myrrh
All dealers are authorized to refund your meney for the
first bottle if not snited.
2 s THEY SPREAD
Kill All Flies! ™5
Placed anywhere, DAISY FLY KILLER attracts and
kills all flies, Neat, clean, oma.mcn;a.l. cozvegswnfi and
o - cheap. Lasts allgeas
e o, il
P S LAN Al & can’t epill or tip over;
A ’r;“l’f‘:"\\fig"fl\‘?/ will not soil or injure
by ;\\!‘/A} RS anything. Guaranteed.
(OISR J( Insist upon
ML= Y DAISY FLY KILLER
from your dealer,
HAROLD SOMERS Brooklyn N. Y.
For PILES
J TN ;
IS (PATDY— Mo
'|~‘, o JEAISLENES Guaranteed
xfi* W/Any druggist will refund your
¥ money if PAZO OINTMENT fails
)fl . to cure Itching, Blind, Bleeding or
¥ \JProtruding Piles, In tubes with
s\Wpile pipe, 75¢; or in tin box, 60c.
A single dose of Dr. Peery’'s “'Dead Shot"
expels worms. Tones up the stomach and
bowels. No after purgative necessary,
All druggists, 50c,
’
.
\ D Peery's
‘ Qeod Shot for WORMS
. v
Vermifuge
At druggists or 372 Pear] Street, Now York City
D IZZX ?
KEEP YOUR.
LIVER. RIGHT
EVERY MORNING and NIGHT TAKE
. »
Dr.Thachers — )
REE 5082 \egetable
fREE 5555 N 9 SYRUP
) PARKER’'S
=~ HAIR BALSAM
}.)-AA..’V . RemovesDandruff-Stops Hulr¥Falling]
\\\ ; Restores Color and
&?\\-\ Beauty to Gray and Faded
60, and §I.OO at Draggists,
R et ] dliscox Chem. Wks. Patehogne, N,
FLORESTON SHAMPOO—IdeaI for use in
connection with Parker's Hair Balsam. Makes the
hair soft and fluffy., 50 cents by mail or at dru;-
@lsts. Hiscox Chemical Works, Patchogue, N.
SORE EYES 2.5%
Eye Lotion
felloves and oures sore and inflamed oyes in % to 48
lun;r‘. \l’fl:l."“ ‘h: ';“1"?" .;1:.1 'an"!'l“ mln
sk yo! ruggist or dealer for 4 . y
trum Reform fluwn-ary P t(J Box IDT, Afiuuu.dn.
- . .
Hollywood Skin Beautifier
Used by many Stars in Hollywood, Koeops
the Ekin young and clear, Mull One Dollar
o Madame Pattenaude, 172 So. Waestern
Ave., Los Angeles, Calif,
Momach, Skin and A% Constitutional dis
vases successtully treated without special diet
by nonseptie therapy; safexunrd your health;
Address to me your cang today. Prof, Raab,
311 Manzana d¢ Gomes § ldg., Havana, Cuba,
Lacies' Perfection Fponge Rubber Rol'um
Garters, get size with string. Bend 26¢, post
rhl to you. The Best Novelty Supply, Rt.
» Box 118, 80, Akron, Ohie.
Ladies and Gents Need No Capital or Ex
perience. Bample ease, face creams, eto,, free,
Special €O% commission, Dept. A, Pure Drug
Products Co., Sta. “D." Cin innatl, Ohlo,
Agents and Salesmen Wanted, Dixle tube
Alel never croeps, slips, or eomes off Bend
soc for sample box, eompiete instructions and
terme, Dixie Pateh Co., Middietown, Ohio.
W. N. U, ATLANTA, NO. 22..1928,