The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, January 26, 1929, Image 6

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NUARY 26, 1929
DALLAS POST, DALLAS, PA.,SATURDAY, JA
al
GNKLE
A son was born to Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Elston on Wednesday, January
s Mother and child are doing very
120 eno ammo m %¢
ell,
af # *
~My. and Mrs. Wallace Perrin and
children, of Trucksville, spent Sunday
afternoon with Mrs. Perrin’s parents,
‘Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Miers.
*
* *
* 3p
Mrs. Floyd Spencer is seriously ill
with pneumonia.
* *
Mrs. John Isaacs is improving after
‘a two weeks illness of flu.
Mrs. Lyman Moore is improving
Fd
Oliver: Ellsworth was called on Tues-
day of this week to care for her. Dr.
Schooley, of Shavertown is the' at-
tending physician.
v ¥ *
*
Walter Elston, who has been em-
ployed at Carlisle, Pa. the past year,
had the misfortune to slip and fall on
the ice two weeks ago breaking his
shoulder blade, he is making a good
covery at his home here under the
*
wen Ide was taken suddenly ill on
sday night with appendicitis and
dnesday morning was rushed to
perated upon at eleven o’clock.
t reports he was doing as well as
could be expected. The two little
children of Mr. and Mrs. Ide are seri-
ously ill with the flu. Mr. Ide’s
other, Mrs. Bertha Ide, of Idetown,
_ spending sometime with her son’s
mily and helping to care for them.
Dr. Brown, of Lehman, is attending
* * *
C. W. Kunkle has been a sufferer
from the flu the past week. He is
under the care of Dr. Swartz.
% 2 ¥ v * * 0k
Mrs. Olin Kunkle and Fred Kunkle
are recovering from the flu and Mrs.
Fred Kunkle from bronchitis. Dr.
Swartz attended them.
* * *
Mr. ‘and Mrs. Stanley Durland, of
~ West Wyoming, Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Makinson and Nellie Makinson, of
Forty Fort, and William Baird, of
Trucksville, were callers: at the Olin
Kuk cle home on Sunday. -
Ls RE dh pe ee
5" William Brace and Mrs. Gid-
eon Miller visited Mrs. Ralph Elston
on Tuesday afternoon. i
The<people of this community were
- shocked to hear of the death of Miss
- Dorothy Bulford, of Trucksville last
week. Miss Bulford was a niece of
‘Mrs. W. H. Conden, Lewis and Wm.
Nulton and had often visited here.
She had spent a few days at the home
of her cousin, Edward Conden, of Al-
derson about a week before her last
illness.
* * *
Lewis Nulton has been reported
quite seriously ill with the flu this
‘week, 3
after 4 severe illness of the flu. Mrs.
2
FOR WINTER
EGG PRODUCTION
FEED
Maturity and Health Make
for Strong Bodied Fowls.
One of the paramount problems at
this time is the matter of feeding for
maximum egg production through the
winter, when egg prices are highest.
Some mighty goed hints on this ques-
tion are supplizd by R. L. Watkins.
extensicn poultry specialist, Ames, in
his bulletin for record flock keepers.
His suggestions follow :
“Winter eggs. are laid by well-ma-
which are comfortably housed and
properly fed. = Maturity and health
make for a strong-bodied egg machine.
Pullets, to lay large eggs Steadily
throughout the winter, must have
proper body size and weight. = Leg-
horns or other light breeds may be
considered ready for a regular laying
ration when three to three and one-
fourth pounds in weight. Heavier
breeds, such as Reds, Rocks and Wy-
andottes should weigh four and one-
half to five pounds. Immature pullets
must not be forced into egg produc-
tion by feeding them on a regular lay-
ing ration. :
“Comfort enables the bird to utilize
feed in manufacturing eggs instead of
using the energy thereby obtained to
maintain body warmth. Feeds are
the raw materials out of which hens
build eggs.
"“A well-balanced egg mash contain-
ing ground grains or grain by-prod-
ucts, protein concentrates in the form
of meat and milk products; minerals
in the form of bonemeal, salt and
some grit; and oflen green food in the
form of ground alfalfa must be kept
available’ to hens and pullets if they
are to lay any number of eggs during
the winter months. :
“Whole or cracked grains such as
corn, oats, wheat and barley should
be used in eombination with a mash
to maintain body weight and comfort.
Body weight cannot be maintained
during heavy egg production unless
sufficient grain feeds are included in
the ration. In a ration made up of
mash and grain the mash feed con-
tains most of the egg building mate-
rial while the scratch grain contains
most of the fat and heat-building
material. Good poultry management
requires that the birds consume suffi-
cient mash to maintain their egg pro-
duction, also that they eat sufficient
grains to maintain body weight. Hens
losing weight soon stop laying.”
L
Cod Liver Oil Is Most
Easily Given in Feed
The value of cod liver oil for poul-
try is summed up by one hen profes
sor as follows: Stronger and health-
ier birds, prevention of leg weakness
from heavy laying in late winter and
spring, better looking egg shells, more
and stronger chicks from the eggs
hatched, and fewer blood spots in
eges.
Cod liver oil is most easily fed,
this professor writes, in semi-solid
buttermilk or cottage cheese. Or, he
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Elston are re-
covering from a two week’s illness of
the flu.
*
* *
week.
5)
_ his second attack of the flu.
10;
READ THE POST
B
paid subscription list.
years ago.
A dangerous head cold coming? Check
it quickly with Musterole Laxative Cold
Tablets—safe,chocolate-coated, easy
to take. No griping or head buzzing.
Relief is usually quick. Always keep
~ pared by makers of famous Musterole.
At all druggists 35c.
As a special one time trial offer,
age for 10c by clipping this adver-
tisement and sending it with 10c,
also your name and address to
The Musterole Company, Cleveland, O.
LAXATIVE
COLD TABLETS
Chocolate-coated—ecasy to take
H. W. Herdman has been suffering
from an attack of the flue the past!
Thomas Landon is recovering from |
A publication that serves a
Many
readers of which date back 37
StopThat Head Cold
Musterole Cold Tablets handy. Pre- |
you may obtain a regular 35c pack- |
says, you can feed it with the scratch
egrain—a quart to 100 hens every
week. {
For a flock that size, his method is
to mix about a teacupful of the oil
| with the scratch grain every other
day. Keep this up until spring takes
the flook outdoors again.
Guard Against Disease
in Feeding Green Bone
Some butcher shops have installed
bone grinders and sell ground green
pone. This is an excellent feed when
| fed fresh, but poultry offal must not
tured pullets and healthy old hens |
Auto Owners and
Drivers May Soon
Carry Tax Burden
—:01—
Governor Fissier is preparing to]
submit a financial programme to the
legislature to increase revenues for!
highway construction. Submission
of the budget to the General Assem-
bly this week assumes that the pres-
ent revenues of the department will
not be decreased. :
An incrase of another cent a gal-,
lon in the gasoline tax would bring
in approximately $7,009,000 more a
year. An increase of $1 for each of|
the 1,750,000 licensed drivers also has
been suggested. There have been
frequent reports that the administra-|
tion may recommend some changes in|
bus license fees. |
In presenting his budget the ‘gov- |
ernor did not figure on any. expendi- |
tures for maintenance of city streets |
or the acquisition of county bridges |
that form part of the highway sys-|
tem. He has recommended that the |
State assume these obligations.
Modern Devices |
* Aid Home Heating
|
|
/ |
|
Two auxiliary features in the |
home-heating plant are pointed out |
by the Holland Institute of Thermol- |
ogy of Holland, Mich, as means by |
which the average bome-owner may
telp to keep his heiting costs low.
One of tI
mostat for opening and closing drafts
at certain hours, and for maintaining
a constant temperature in the princi-
pal rooms. Many kinds of thermostats
are available, and they may be op-
erated with all types of modern cen-
«ral heating plants, including the
vapor-air circulating system. Not only
are they great conveniences, but they
save fuel by preventing wide fluctua-
tions of temperature. /
Proper humidifying equipment is a
second means to economy of fuel. If
the air in the rooms is dry, it will
have to be higher in temperature to
give the same comfort effect as vapor-
ized air of moderate warmth. Air
conditioning experts agree that the
relative humidity in a home should be
about 40 per cent. Several gallons of
water must be evaporated daily to
maintain this, and the newest thing
in the way of humidifying equipment
is a device in a warm-air circulating
|
evaporating 20 gallons or more a day:
sources will not reduce the total
fuel bill by a half or one-third, the
Holland Institute of Thermology
states, they will prove more than
enough to justify the small invest-
ment they require. i
Chicago’s First Settler
The first settler in the ‘territory
now covered by the city of Chicago
was not a white man. About the time
of the revolution Gene Baptiste Point
de Saible. a colored man. from San
Domingo, established himself in what
is now ‘Chicago as an Indian trader.
He built a log house and later sold
it to a Frenchman
20%
“Movies” in Education
Experiments sponsored by the Na
tional Education association and con
ducted by Doctor -Wood of Columbia
university and Doctor Freeman of the |
University of Chicago show that chil
dren make 383 per cent greater gains
in science by learning these subjects
partly throngh motion pictures.
0:
To Preserve Youth
One of the best ways to keep from
growing old is to tinker with the ma-
chine while the engine is running in a
closed garage.—Louisville Times.
Helpful Organization
Lend-a-hand clubs are organizations
for yoang people established in 1871
for religious, philanthropical and so-
cial purposes. The name is taken
from Edward Everett Hale's story
“Ten Times One Is Ten.” The clubs
have a common badge, a Maltese
cross with the inscription “In His
Name,” but each arranges its own
constitution.
10:
Struggle Degenerates
“The struggle for powe.’ said Hi
Ho, the sage of Chinatown, “is marked
at first by a wish to serve humanity
and later by a desire for ye
Washington Sfar.
: 0:
Artistic Cooperation
| The Basilica of St. Francis at AS
| sisi, “cradle of Italian art,” was deco
| rated by Guinta, an artist rrom Pisa;
| Cavallina,” Roman mosaicist; Cimabue
and Giotto from Florence; Simone do
| Marinto and the Lorenzetti.
se is an automatic ther- |
heating plant which is capable of i
While the fuel savings from these |"
Philco
Console
An exquisite
Louis XVI cabinet
of thoroughly high
grade construction
and elegant finish.
Alsoother hand-
some furniture
models.
PIPER
ALL-ELECT
0:
Suspicious Change
You can't slight a man 25 years.
says the philosopher in the American
Magazine, and then decide to turn
over a new leaf and greet him like a
brother. You may mean to be friend
ly but the other man will suspect your
motive.
4 0 4
Tough Lines
Every fime we count ten before
speaking we forget what it was we
were going to say.—Toledo Blade.
| i
50
u
SALE
be cround in because of the danger
I ot transmitting disease to the flock
| This is expecially true of tuberculosis.
Whenever a supply of green bone is
purchased it should be spread out
thin in a cold room. If left in a paper
sack even in a room below freezing
the center of the mass will heat and
spoil. Green bone cannot be success-
| fully kept in large quantities unless
| thinly spread.
Poultry Notes
|
| RUHR HHH RRR ERRFX
A fresh supply of water should be
at all times.
*
cold
available to the hens
* *
During extremely
| grain than during mild weather.
| * * *
Birds prefer grain feeds.
nt of grain fed.
mined by the amou
* * *
: REE =
Ni ] and Morning to keep
Nigh Clean, Clear and Healthy
Write for Free “Eye Care”
The mash is the egg food and th
as there is plenty for them in th
hoppers.
- * *
regardless of the kind of weather
as it is eggs with good,
germs that you are after.
* * *
marke
‘| you ¢ p» produce.
ha 7
Fee Ne HH FR Fe Fe Re Re Fe HH HHH HHH RRR AK
FRR FRX
weather
birds should be given more corn and
The
amount of mash consumed is deter-
birds will like it and eat it as long
Let your breeders out every day
healthy
Only by constant improvement can
you hope to get in the A-1 class, and
when you do you'll find a waiting
pir every egg or baby chick
e
e
’
Dallas
—PHONES—
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Suitable for single or duplex.
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Fr ® your old Electro-Dynamic ||
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| rae 1
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is £EReia08 founded 1892
In Kingston
A lot on Rutter Avenue, near Pierce, with four-
Will build and finance a small four-family, ond
guarantee annual income of $2,650.00.
174-R-7
Ground and building cost you less than $20,000.
oyd A. McHenry
Real Estate --- Fire Insurance
—ADDRESS—
Center Hill Rd., Dallas
206 Pierce St., Kingston
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N
SHAVERTOWN
No MOPS are like the im-
proved triangular O-Cedar
Polish Mop—no other pol-
ish so remarkable in its re-
sults as O-Cedar. Use them.
Mops, 75¢,$1,81.25. Polish,
4-0z. botile,30c; 12 oz.,60c.
over
38 years
28 ounces for 25°
KC
Baking Powder
(double acting)
USE LESS
than of high priced brands
‘MILLIONS OF POUNDS
USED BY OUR GOVERNMENT