Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 100, Decatur, Adams County, 26 April 1935 — Page 5
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Bederal farm loans of the Federal Land Bank of Louisville, Ky., the Bams county national farm B LOAN ASSOCI ATION, ■ of Decatur, Indiana a Charter and has been duly authorized and empowered loans in ull of Adams County. are expecting to re-finance your farm loan call or write ■ Office: 133 South Second Street ■L Decatur, Indiana t inhart, Scc’y-Treas. Fred T. Schurger, Investigator ■ ————__—~»- —— OATO GROWERS will be at the HOTEL, DECATUR, I FRlDAY—Afternoon and Evening ■ a n *' ■SATURDAY—Afternoon and Evening I April 26 and 27 ■ to sign contracts and to talk to those ■ interested in growing tomatoes. Bcatur Packing Co., Inc. _L for Sale lIKOLTER’S Bri*etual county directory for— I ''dams ( ounty—Names and Addresses I . I|v *>f Decatur I I M e ™ ,ur Neven Rural Routes I I ■ iroe—Monroe Routes I I cJ"‘‘~ Be '-ne Routes I I l i ncVi f--(>eneva Routes I I n " (,r « v e, Pleasant Mills, Preble. | | A 2 ne directory also contains the history of I I Ad" !!,S (o,|l ’ty, Government Officials, IIC .u tou nty Officials, Decatur Off icials, it v a i ui* 8 °f Adams County, and Other iP alu “ble Information. I ’ •^iW*W‘LL~anM l rr--.-rri mi 11 —-n ,nr» .TThrwrjß».i > *?*M > ■' lg W
I portunity of selecting her own voI cation. The parents should not atI tempt to select the vocations of the girl. "The young girl should be taught that girls and boys are on an equal I basis as far as opportunity is < onI < erned. "The girl should be allowed to do the things at home she will be expected to do elsewhere, either at i work or at play." — —o- — BOVS AND GIRLS GET FREE TRIPS Free Trips Will Be Given To Purdue University Annual Kound-up As achievement awards a number of Adams county troys and girls will be given free trips to the Purdue University annual round-up to be held Wednesday. May 1 to Friday. May 3, inclusive. The boys and girls will go under the direction of County Agent L. E. Archbold and Assistant County Agent Helen F. Matin. The following girls will go on an ' achievement basis for project cotn-1 pleted last year. The girls are Viv-1 ian Schwartz, Pauline Yoss and Huth Ineichen. The members selected as outstanding in the calf club are LeRoy Schwartz and Pollyanna Lehl man. Hugh David Mouser will make the [trip on the basis of his cow pro- ’ duction record. All the Adonis county delegatee will represent the district in coni tests such as the judging of dothi ing, calf club judging and demonstration contests. Lectures will be given during the -
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, APRIL 26, 1935.
• round-up by experts In the various lines of 4-H club activities. f Tlte purpose of the round-up is to give training to the 4-H club t members. An effort will also be 1 made to furnish them with some attractive entertainment. o PHYSICAL ED COURSE OFFER I I Purdue University To , Oller 11 Physical Ed Courses For Women Lafayette. April 26—Eleven different courses covering the field of i health and physical education will I be ottered by the Purdue Univer-1 I sity Department of Physical Education for Women during an intensive six and one-half weeks i course to be offered this summer 1 from .lune 13 to July 27, it was announced today. | The special intensive courses in 1 health and physical education will afford teachers an opportunity to ' secure a maximum of instruction in a minimum of time under ex- ' pert supervision. The instruction- | al staff will consist of Prof. Helen I Hazelton, head of the Purdue De--1 partinent of Physical Education for Women; Miss Emma Waterman, Assistant Professor of Physical Education at Ohio State University, and Miss Helen Ellis, of the Purdue Department- Dr. S. J. Miller, acting director of the Universal health service will give Ute first aid course and L. W. Labree of the Men's physical education staff will conduct the Hygiene work. According to Miss Hazelton, it will be possible for a student to earn seven university credits during tlie condensed session. Among the courses that will be offered are the following: Swimming, The Teaching of High School Health and Physical Education. Dancing and Gymnastics, Team Game Technique, Advanced Dancing, First Aid and Preventive Medicine, Applied Kinesiology and Corrective Physical Education, Personal and Community Hygiene, Recreational Leadership, Organization of Physical Education, and Problems of Physical Education. Costs of attending the summer session will be extremely reasonable. The registration fee of $27.00 includes health service and an active fee. In addition, the students enrolled in practical classes will Bring This Coupon TO THE Holthouse Drug Co. And Get A SI.OO Bottle of WA-HOO BITTERS FOR 25 CENTS The Old Indian Blood, Nerve, Stomach, Liver and Kidney Remedy on the market since 1858. This is an introductory offer for a few days only. Not good after Saturday, April 27th. Positively not over three (3) bottles to a person. We publish no testimonials but ask you to try this Old Indian Root and Herb Remedy. A remedy of positive merit and natural laxative! Proven by three generations. Be sure it bears the name C. K. Wilson. Master Mixed CONCENTRATE for (HICK ENS LAYING HENS DAIRY CATTLE - Also - HOG SUPPLEMENTS For Sale By BURK ELEVATOR CO. Decatur Monroe 25—Phone—-19
Mazelin Says Little Damage Caused Fruit Trees By Recent Cold Weather
(Editor's Note; — Following Is the I seventh In a series of articles writ- ‘ ten exclusively for the Decatur Daily Democrat by D. D. Mazelin, prominent Adams county fruit ex .pert.) 1 As might have been expected this month of April Is giving us all I sorts of weather, sometimes many , I varieties in a single day or per-; haps in a single hour. It went to extremes, however, on Monday night and Tuesday morning of last week when It sent the mercury I tumbling to about 20 degrees above zero during the night with a slight rise noticeable before day- - break. Altho the temperature was as low as that apparently little damage has resulted to the blossoms ( be- required to make a $2.00 gym I l nasiurn deposit fee, half of which | | is returnable when the lock is returned. Board and room in the University community cun'be obtained at reasonable rates, while the new Women s Residence Hall will furnish u single room and board for $9.00 a week. —— o PLAN TO FIGHT SOIL EROSION 1936 Wheat Adjustment Program Will Be Aid To Fight Soil Erosion Lafayette, April 26 — Contiuu- , an e of wheat adjustment for 1936 and future years, upon which wheat farmers will express their opinions in the national referendum May 25, offers an opportunity for a positive attack on the problem of soil erosion, according to Dean J. H. Dkinner, Purdue University, Director of Extension. It is contemplated that every farmer cooperating in a wheat program will have an opportunity to, combat the erosion menace by [ planting his contracted acreage to soil-binding crops, or getting some of it back into grass. The number of contracted acres under a new program will be de- ‘ termined by the crop tills year und by the outlook for the earning year. The maximum adjustment which I can be asked under the proposedi new contract is 25 percent of the | base. This provision is intended to I meet extreme conditions only. In the present wheat program the limit to adjustment was 20 percent, but the most that was asked in any one year was 15 percent in 1934. The proposed program is for a 4-year period, and farmers voting in the referendum will remember that there can be years of abundant rainfall just as there are years of drought. Unlimited acreage and A LOT of things can j happen to goods in , transit. When your mer-ji chandise goes traveling, 1 ! protect it against loss orlj damage with a Motor ( Truck Contents Policy is-si sued by the dependable'! Automobile Insurance j Company of Hartford, Connecticut. i Aetna Casualty and I Surety Co. | Aetna Automobile Ins. Co. Aetna Life Insurance Co. I SUTTLES-EDWARDS CO. I Agents !. Decatur, Ind. Phone 358 ,* IllliilSlliillIl: I'
i on fruit trees. Examination of var- ' ions kinds of fruit disclosed that no damage had been done to apples and early and late cherries and I comparatively littel to ipears and the early blooming varieties of plums. Sweet cherries seem to be suffering the most. The foliage of many trees has been damaged to I some extent but there should be I no serious results trbm this injury.' Judging from the present out-| look we would still urgently recom- 1 mend that a scab spray be applied ' to apples at once as a protective measure against infection from the heavy discharge of scab spores which will take place in this vicinity during the next continuous 1 ruin. If you have not sprayed since > last Saturday you should do so at once. [ plenty of rainfall in past years ! have produced bumper crops and caused prices to tumble. The object of the proposed new program is to avoid as far as possible the creation of new burdensome surpasses. __o — Submit Program To Pay Vets’ Bonus — —• i ( Washington, April 26 —(UP) —j. Secretary of treasury Henry Mor- , !»jnate finance committee today an inheritance and gift tax program , whlcji he eaid would iprovide funds ; i for payment of the soldier'« bonus. I j ■ln a letter to chairman Pat Hur-1 1 rison, D., Mise., author of the com- i promise bonus measure scheduled i for senate consideration next week, i Morgantheau proposed a graduated i scale of tuxes which he said might i yield $300,000,000 in 1936 and possibly $600,000,000 annually after j I that date.
Balanced Ration Os Grain Needed To Insure Good Milk Production
(Editor's note: —This is the sec-, mid of a series of articles being j written tor the farm page by Mer- ■ win Miller, Adams county cowl I tester. I "A good dairy cow always gives' a heavy flow of milk on spring j pasture and if it is fed and cared for properly during the winter, I will give nearly a spring time flow ' of milk. “If a farmer finds that his cows' increase very much in their milk when turned on pasture he has, probably not fed a balanced ration of grain to supplement the rough-1 age. “The dairy herd owned by Telfer Paxson, member of the Dairy herd improvement association, was fed good roughage and a balanced ration of grain in proper amounts. A day's milking was weighed and tested for butterfat. "Then the cows were turned on good pasture and 10 days later the milk tested. It was found that the cows had only increased six per cent in their milk and tested less, so there was no difference in the amount of butterfat they produced.;
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CODNTY HORSES PRAISED HIGH Purdue University Expert Praises Work of Horse Owners Here COUNTY HORSES That Adams county is recognized as one of the leading horse | I breeding areas In the country is I evident from a letter just received by County Agent L. E. Archbold from R. B. Cooley, association prof. ssor of animal husbandry at Purdue University. Mr. Cooley is well known in Adams county having participated in a number of shows and demonstrations here in recent years. The tetter dated Aipril 24. 1935 reads: L. E. Archhold County Agricultural Agent Decatur, Indiana Dear Mr. Archbold: “1 understand from Mr. T. R. HoN'.iert, Greeley, <lowa, that ho is selling some good imported Belgian stallions around Bluffton and Decatur and just across the line in Ohio. You are to be congratulated on helping your County Horse Committee and others interested in good stallions to make a move of that kind. UndoivbtedTy. Mr. Holbert has the best assortment of imported stallions in this country. The limiting factor in the production of good horses is the stallion end of the business. The counties that keep up the stallion end of the breeding business and develop their stallions through Hie Gold Medal Colt Club work will certainly go ahead. You fellows who are getting in on the ground floor on
"Most of tlte dairymen in the AdI ams county D. H. J. A. feed proper- ' ly. It has l>eeu discovered that there was an increase of only 'three per cent in milk for the i month of June over the month of i April among these cows. At a local condensery there was an increase of 52 per cent in milk received for I the same period. Most of the cattle are on winter feed during April and on pasture during June. "This large per cent of Increase I in milk after cows are on pasture I shows that the average dairyman is not getting enough milk during I the winter. It would probably bo I profitable for him to feed a balanI ced ration of grain to the cows. "When corn silage and good hay is fed a grain mixture of four parts corn or wheat, two parts of oats or bran and one part cracked soybeans, soybean oilmeal or some other high protein supplinient makes a good balanced ration. It should be ground course and fed at the rate of one pound of grain a day for each pound of butterfat tho cow produces in a week. "It is also profitable to feed the good cows grain while they are on i pasture. ’’
' —-r~-=‘=E—-this work are liound to lead the others and come out on top." Cordially yours, R. B. Cooley. o State Junior High School Conference —— Indianapolis, Ind., April 26 —(UP) Fifty educational leaders will apeak at the annual state junior ihigh, .school conference here May 3, Vir-
50/ FARM ol ,/o LOANS O/ O Twenty year amortized loann. ■J/ Privilege to pay any amount / at any time. Interest to stop / from date payment is receiv- / ed at home office. A. D. SUTTLES Suttles-Edwards Office Niblick Bldg. —Too are fishing at the Grand i Lake— Visiting our Parks or out ® • for a drive — STOP AT The MANHATTAN CELINA, OHIO feS" DINNERS Draught BEER Bottle I Fred Schlenker & Son Props Buy Decatur Hatchery’s SUPER-QUALITY CHICKS. Book your orders now for May delivery. See Our Complete Line of Chick Feeders and Waters. Also Special Prices on Brooder Stoves. Decatur Hatchery Monroe Street Phone 197 11 S) COME to rUlflf’Q ROADSIDE Inltß □ inn ! TONIGHT ‘Nutty Nite’ Something New and Different? GOOFY FLOOR SHOW GOOFY WAITERS GOOFY ORCHESTRA Make reservations early! — Saturday Night - SIX ACT FLOOR SHOW Master of Ceremonies Davey ami His Giris. - J. J
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gll Stincbaugh, Indlanapolia, program director, han announced. Dr. Charles 11. Judd, chairman of tho department oX education of tho university of Chicago, will addrena the ■convention. Among thoae who will preeide at i group diacoMlonn are E. A. JolinI son, Muncie, P. D. Pointer, South | Itend, Hugh Vandiver, Marion, Lowall Spencer, Mlchawaka, Wendell Godwin, La Porte, Bertha Leming, Agnes M.ihoney, Emil ath, Mm. Ruth Heavenrldge and C E. Noah, all of dndianapolin, and T. B. Calvert, Muncie. —— . — ~o Hit And Run Psdestrian Berkeley, Cal.—(U.R)—Three-year-old Jens Wagner is recovering from a head injury auffored when he was struck by n hit-and-run pedestrian. A large middle-aged woman, running after a atreet car, knocked j him down without stopping to render aid.
