i ps al ae BGT ALLAS POST, wh ae DALLAS, PA. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 25,1020 + 1 © "SERGE FEED FOR WINTER EGG PRODUCTION Maturity and Health Make - for Strong Bodied Fowis. ~ 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 good hints on this ques- tion are suppliad 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- tured pullets and healthy old hens 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: ~ fourth peunds in weight. half to five pounds. horns or other light breeds may be onsidered ready for a regular laying ration when three to three and one- Heavier breeds, such as Reds, Rocks and Wy- andottes should weigh four and one- 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, o8ts, wheat and barley should be used in combination with a mash to maintain body weight and comfort. - day. ‘Body weight cannot be maintained during heavy egg production unless sufficient grain feeds are included in the ration. In a ration madegup of mash and grain the mash feed con tains most of the egg building mate: rial while the scratch grain contaiis most of the fat and heat-building material. Cwod poultry management requires that the birds consume suffi- cient mash to maintain their egg pro- duction, also that they eat sufficient’ grains (6 Maifitain Body weight, Hens losing weight soon stop laying.” Cod Liver Oil Is Most Easily Given in Feed The value of cod liver oil for pecal- 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 eggs. Cod liver oil is most easily fed, this professor writes, in se.ai-solid buttermilk or cottage cheese. Or, he says, you can feed it with the scratch grain—a quart to 100 hens every week. Yor a flock that size, his method is to mix about a teacupful of the oil with the scratch grain every other 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 bone. This is an excellent feed when fed fresh, but poultry offal must not be ground in because of the danger of transmitting disease to the flock. This is especially 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. FREEREEXLXXERXXRXXE EEX LRX$N Poultry Notes A fresh supply of water should be available to the hens at all times, * * * During extremely cold weather birds should be given more corn and grain than during mild weather, - * * Birds | prefer grain feeds. The amount of mash consumed is deter- mined by the amount of grain fed. x * x The mash is the egg food and the birds will like it and eat it as long: as there Is plenty for them in the hoppers. . * . Let your breeders out every day regardless of the kind of weather, as it is eggs with good, healthy germs that you are after. * 2 * Only by constant improvement can you hope to get in the A-1 class, and when you de you'll find a waiting market for every egg or baby chick yor cau produce. 5 7 | ciety held a meeting at the home of | i : | Mrs. Ira Coon on Friday. i QCarverton | SET | || Miss Iva Conklin is ill with the la & | grippe. Mrs. Isaac Coursen called on Miss ok ox Ida Anderson recently. League will be held in the church * kk on Wednesday night. Mrs. Ira Coon spent a day recent- CE a ly at Dallas. Mr. and Mrs. George Knorr, chil- dren, Margaret, Etta, Sarah and . Mrs. Herbert Smail is recovering | Charles called at the home of Mrs. from an illness. Mary Knorr recently. # * * x 5 Mrs. Gensel and children: Eddie, Betty and Roland called on Mrs. Knorr recently. 7 #* & #* Mr. Sam Smith visited Mr! and Mrs. Isaac Coursen recently. # * * * * * Sunday services—Sunday School, February 24 at 1:30 followed by church at 10:30. TS Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Conklin and ( children, Mabel, Glen and Marie call- ed on Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Conklin. Mrs. Anderson and Mrs. Benney ; ¢ called on Mrs. John Coon recently. Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Knorr, of Kingston, Mrs. Bertha Anderson and daughter, Ida, attended the funeral of their cousin, Mrs. David Williams, at Scranton, recently. Miss Ida Anderson visited at the| Mr Lester Culver had his car stol- home of Mr. and Mrs. George Knorr en recently while in Wilkes-Barre. recently, pl RR Mr. Clifford Gay has purchased a new horse. * * * Mrs. Emery Harris is ill. * * * Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Hay and daughters, Dorothy and Marie, called at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Thomp- son recently. The Women’s Home Missionary So- Je = g = " NN NY NY NN NN NAN NN NN PP PENN} “Tell The World” (| IN SPITE of all your enthusiasm over a new salad oil or shoe or hair dresser, you cannot possibly pass on the good news to more than a few people. You can’t really “tell the world.” 5 The manufacturer himself is in the same fix. He can’t tell the world. His salesmen can’t. His dealers can’t. And the world ought to be told. It wants to know. It wants to know what’s new, what's not only good, but better than the best; or cheaper; or more durable; or more useful; or just plain more fun. Advertising “tells the world” today. Back of every advertisement is somebody, perhaps a whole group of somebodies, full of enthusiasm just as you are when you discover something that makes things easier or better for you. They are telling just as many people as they can reach in the world in person. But that is only a tiny fraction of those they speak to in advertising... oa seein dg ER ~~ ee tral Advertisements are truly personal things to th people who write them. And they can be exceedingly personal for you, too, for they mean better food, bet- ter clothing, increased health, a happier home, greater prosperity. : READ THE ADVERTISEMENTS THEY TELL YOU WHAT YOU WANT TO KNOW [TOUTE OOO OOOO OOPOOOOOOOOOOOIOODIVIOOOOOOIO UID The Landaulet Sedan , Body by Fisher Youn be proud to drive it-no matter where you go Many fine things are being said of the New Pontiac Big Six. That is only natural. For it represents something entirely new in low- priced automobiles. It is a big car, in that it offers every desirable big car quality. And it’s a car you can be proud to drive wherever you choose to go . . . The New Pontiac Big Six was designed for people who want to be proud of their automobiles. It has the style and beauty of a big car along with big car power and speed. That’s why the New Pontiac Big Six is enjoying such favor among those forward looking buyers who want to step up the quality of their auto- mobiles without any great drain on the purse. Prices $745 and up, f. o. b. factory, plus delivery charges. Bumpers and rear fender guards regular equipment at slight est g. Check Oakicnd-Pontice ivered prices—they ct § charges. General Motors Time Payment Plan available at minimum rate. GUY E. WOOLBERT NEW PONT) BIG PRODUCT OF GENERAL MOTORS C. A. Frantz Has His Own Refrigeration —03— C. A. Frantz, owher of the big Dal- las general stord,_is=fot one of those who will be compelled to fill an ice house this winter. For many years this was a big job for our popular local merchant. ; The immense refrigeration plant of Mr. Frantz does away with the bur- densome' trouble of cutting and haul- ing ice and filling refrigerators dur- ing the summer months. Myr. Frantz says that the .opera- tion of his plant with the present system of refrigeration ‘costs but a fraction of what the old method call- ed for. GROBLE draws BOILS to r ot SEAR DRANS SALVE anywhere! Only 35 cents a yard 'Ula.bandage and tape WSKI 8CO,, Plymouth,Pa. founded 1892 WE - Self Confidence If a child can acquire a superiority complex before he is old enough to be a prig he will achieve self-confidence, _—American Magazine. : Former Kunkle Resident Dies In Arizona —i0.—=¢ J Ward has beep” received from| go paNgGE ATT-STIK PONGEE Phoenix, Arizona, of the. déath in th Y 5 that city on Jamweey™ST of Wiliam| atthe lowest price,Amn W. Kunkle, of complications. De- ceased was born at Kunkle in 1856, son of Major Wesley Kunkle. He resided in Kingston for several years. He became a resident of the metro- polis and capital of Arizona when that now thriving city was but a} trading post. He conducted the first general store in the place, and for many years had been in. the real estate business. Surviving Mr. Kunkle are his wife, one son, Clarence W., of Alhambra, California, a daughter-in-law, two grandsons, and one sister, Miss Anne E. Kunkle. vy pg where in America 6 TC3066—Here’s the biggest Silk Pongee bargain to be found anatural head Te 2628 for this genuine government- Cod stamped Fukui-Ken Red Label | Silk Pongee—the very best of the : six different grades of Japanese / M. J. JUDGE & COMPANY 244 S. Main St., Wilkes-Barre | Silk Pongee. Why buy an inferior It comes in the Natural Tan shade and washes beautifully. —and get our big, new, 2 pound Style Book. It’s filled with equally big bargains that will save you Phone 4840-R Genuine Imported First Quality } Japanese 12-Momme weight, all | ; grade when you can buy this— the best, for only 35 centsa yard? About 33 inches wide. Order this superior pongee by No. 6 TC3066 5 . Ayard 3 liens 35¢ as Less tubes ET Tem GL (CCV em REG. TRADE MARK Now greater than ever! Greater power, greater response, even sharper tuning! NOW built with 8 tubes, including rectifier, push-pull amplification and Philco’s NEW TYPE Electro-Dynamic Speaker. High notes, NEW...S TUBES ; (Including Rectifier) with New Type Electro=-Dynamic Speaker _— Letters Praise Philceo Performance eet CS TANG Ce, IVS 10US 56 tivity, superb tone—that's the testimony of letters from Philco users in all parts of the country. Read the excerpts below. Then see for yourself—arrange § SLO With Plenty of Volume “We got station 3LO at | Melbourne, Australia, with more volume than we could use, and with extraordinary clarity of tone.” MRS. A R. MUNSILL Pasadena, Cal. 88 Stations “I cut through local inter- ference and easily brought in 88 distant stations from all parts of the country. The Philco is particularly good in the low wave lengths : where most sets fall down.” : J. P. HANLEY, Chicago, Ill. Vast Coverage 5 Japanese Stations “1 got Hawaii, Alaska, “I have logged many Washington, California, and eastern stations and the fol- Oregon, 20stationsin Canada, lowing Japanese stations: and 100 in the U. S. All JOBK, JOHK, JOAK,JOFK, came in clear.” JOTK. The Philco has mar- Ray c. BLOOM, Muscatine, Ia | velous selectivity and sur- : plus volume and quality that is amazing.” ‘W.M. MORRISON San Diego, Calif. Superb Tone “Philco has given me a | new conception of the possi- bilities of radio music. Its tone quality is exception- ally fine.” MRS.2V. TURNER, Dallas Tex, . “During the day my wife gets many distant stations— | Cleveland, Detroit, Chicago, Florida and many low power stations.” EARLE R. WAUGH Pittsburgh, Pa. Sensitive Tuning “Ifindit very easy to tune in between 30 and 40 stations on my Philco. Powerful sta- tions which usually tune very broadly I can tune out within one or two points of the dial.” ; ' J. DIXON DAVIS, Cincinnati, O. Wonderful Selectivity “My hdt is off to the Philco. I have tuned in Los Angeles, Dallas and Atlanta on 2 points of the dial.” L.O.DARLING, Buffalo, N.Y. ‘ Distance and Breaks Thronsh ¢ loctivity nterference cops Ak ,Interferen T ight y “Ouray is difficult for Philc. ae y radio because of high moun- tains and high voltage trans- mission lines. Philco is the first set that has ever been satisfactory here.” M.J.CANAVAN, Ouray, Colo. including ..F1, Los Angeles, and two Canadian stations. Reception is beautiful.” FRANK T. CARPENTER Kans as City, Mo. Uj Jl ALL-ELECTRIC RADIO now, as well as the pleasing lows. No blur; no rumble. Speech clear and distinct. Tremendous volume without distortion. This marvelous new Philco is now on display at our storel Free Home Demonstration—Easy Terms, if you decide to buy. Come In and Hear It! (Insert Dealer's Name and Address Here) Dallas Hardware & Supply Co. WIR a ae A for free home demonstration, = = Daytime Reception Fi
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers