Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 36, Number 177, Decatur, Adams County, 28 July 1938 — Page 23
LURY ASSOCIATION MAKES PROGRESS
L ir v Association Ends 13th Year Os [Testing Activities
L County Herds Are I ..mod By frequent tMembers Learn L Methods At Many ■eetingsIfFICERSNAMED [ Adams county Dairy Herd iXnt Association rounded thirteenth ™ t b ,r 20th. 1937. wlth 1 , J president; Sol Mower, vice|Lnt: I>. B. Lehman, secretary--
| D. F. Teeple H Operator of B TRUCK LINE BETWEEN 1 Richmond & Fort Wayne with over night connections with all large cities B Our headquarters are in Decatur anti we will he pleased to accomodate you at any time. 8 FREE STREET FAIR and ■ AGRICULTURAL SHOW H AUGUST —1 to 6 linRS l m Proud—- ■ tSyfili kI of ,ny new ITT MAYTAG WASHER ■ Makes work easier and KfilVl 0310 T ■ *■«.. Eliminate Tl 3|U Refrigerator ■"" "»"««ssary drud- . Save on your daily food Beery by letting us zTC | I bill with proper refrigerB Place a MAYTAG in I ation. Stop in and inspect S 9 1 the many timely features M'"ur home today. ■ that make Kelvinator «s | * , the choice of particular L 11 * women. [Hoover Cleaners-Kitchenkook Stoves 8 investigate these four household necessities before you buy. |1 e have a complete line of new models on display and Mill i| H Kiad to demonstrate at your convenience. ■ s «Per quality Bred chicks. We invite you to visit our H Start vnnr ri i # i-i place while attending the | tart your flock from ch.cks an(| Agricultural show, fl Hatched at our plant. August Ito 6. I Decatur Hatchery ■ Phone 497 Decatur, Ind.
tremmrer; ‘E. H. Kruetzman and p. 1). Schwartz, directors; Dan Habegger and Menno Steury, program committee; and Sanford Frazee. cow tester. By October 1. 1937, a complete membership was signed up with which to begin the fourteenth year. These members are: Jacob J. Schwartz, and son, Steury and Schwartz, Daniel Mazelin, Eddie McFarland, Mrs. Telfer Paxson, Homer W. Arnold. Dale D. Moses, Otto B. Lehman. Peter B. Lehman. William Burk.
E. H. Kruetzman, Otto Ewel, C. J. Korte. C. F. Spaulding, Habegger and Walters, Reuben Sieury, Henry Aschleman, Oliver Steed. Roy Price, innlger Bros., Sol Mohser. John J. Schwartz and Noah D. Schwartz. All of the old officers were retained except P. D. Schwartz. Hen-1 I i-yAschleman took his place as dir- j I ector. William Burke and Homer , Arnold were appointed as addition- ; al members ot the program com- i mittee. Sanford Frazee was rehir- ! 1 ed as tester. - The dairy extension activities -for the year included a dairy-leg- I time school at Geneva In February » with E. T. Wallace, extension daily- ' i man. and M. O. Pence, extension . agronomist, as instructors; the an- I . nual Farmers' Banquet in the same ; 1 month at the same place at which ’ s outstanding achievement of the ' , dairymen received recognition. , A banquet was given by the Clov-1 erleaf Creamery and McMillen Feed ;, Mills tor all organized extension ,
DECATUB DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, JULY 28, 1938.
"Everything That Wears Feathers" Will Be at World’s Poultry Congress
X ’ • - ■ •- ■ ’t- /“$ (■»■. ■' .I J. ■ P ? ’a > ■l* ■k. $ x ’ SMES jiuse J - -gX-: -.‘/k? JitWKWSI Housed in the Hall of Live Poultry at the Seventh World's Poultry Congress and Exposition in Cleveland, Ohio, July 28 to August 7, 1939, will be probably the most comprehensive display of all breeds and varieties of poultry ever gathered under one r -of. It is the purpose of Congress officials to gather and display here representative specimens of every known breed and variety. Asked what the word “poultry” denoted as applied to this exposition, one official has replied—" Everything that wears feathers.” Here the visitor will see every breed of chicken from the familiar breeds of our neighboring farm yards to rare and exotic varieties from out of the way corners of the world. There will be ducks and geese and turkeys, pigeons, water fowl and other types of common and rare feather bearing specimens. Here before the eye will range a vision of color and graceful line that would surpass any "beauty parade” for interest. Ever the most experienced poultryman will find himself confronted bysurprise after surprise as he encounters many of our lesser known breeds, colorful fowl from the tropics, rare breeds from far off Asia and little known varieties from the out-of-the-way corners of the world. To Congress visitors the Hall of Live Poultry will b a source of new-found interest and pleasure—and a most worth-while educational feature.
Commitee Os 4-H Calf Club Plays Big Part In Fair The adult 4-H calf club committee consists of Peter B. Lehman. Dale D. Moses. Eli Schwartz, Sol Mosser and Henry Aschleman. dairymen: a 411 calf club: a Jersey Parish Show and an open county show for Guernseys and Wolsteins cattle were held. Cooperation was given the fedpfei government'ln a health campaign for the control of Bang's disease.
YOUR SPINE YOUR HEALTH —— "" 1 jJoL ’‘YEF* '' -A'& ■’ Sfc &Kks >? ? f ® T ■’ * t '-t • ■ * ; isBJ BEFORE AFTER X-Rays Like Above of Local Cases Are On File in Our X-Ray Laboratory. Your body is built over a definite plan. How you have abused and neglected it cannot always be determined by symptoms. X-Ray determines for us what has been done to your spine and what is needed to correct it. If you are sick, find out if your spine is causing your dis-ease. We have our own X-Ray laboratory. For BETTER HEALTH Sec Dr. H. Frohnapfel Your Chiropractor and Naturopath in Decatur since 1921, 104 So. 3rd St. Phone 314
They enrolled 39 boys and 11 girls with SI calves in this activity in 1938. The club has the following offi- " cers: Leßoy Schwartz, president; j Elmer Nussbaum, vice-president; . I Jesse Habegger, secretary-treasur-I er; Juanita Lehman, song and yell ' leader; and Robert L. Mann, news reporter. ■ The calf club show was a part ■ of the cattle show held in conneci tion with the Decatur Free Street I Fair last year. E. T. Wallace, extension dairyman, judged the ex- • bibit. $1.50 per head was paid out of Hie county extension fund to ■, each exhibitor, regardless of placing. Suitable ribbons were given
to designate placement. On an a- j chievemetit basis 10 boys and girls | were given one-day trips to the State Fair. A dairy judging team was coached by Sanford Frazee. This team competed at the Club Round-up in the spring of 1937, at the Jersey I Parish Contest at Decatur and in the State Fair judging contest. I Leßoy Schwartz and Elmer Nuss ’ bauin placed first in the county! agricultural demonstration con- 1 test with their demonstration on “Sterilizing Dairy Equipment." These boys placed fifth at the Purdue Round-Up in the agricultural contest this spring and third in the dairy contest. o Thirty-six 4-fi Club Girls Enter Exhibits I Thirty-six girls completed the 4-H food selection and preparation projects and exhibited their work in connection with the Decatur Free Street Fair, last year. Miss Glennys Arnold judged the exhib-, its. Two hundred forty-six dishes; were prepared and one hundred, meals planned. Virginia Hoffman placed first in i the judging contest held in the es her the right to enter the disbaking project recently. This giv-: trict contest at Fort Wayne this fall. o —■ Famous Park Deer Dead Columbae Fall, Mont. (U.R) — Fan-. ny, the most famous deer in Glacier
t. < ■ .^-<53--.r- . /i,; ’ ' i - ■’ -di I ; ' =4=134 1 .-I i - * - ' ML'WMWt ■ 1 . 1 te. A- - J , v-/L 8H J?u ■■“’t '- f Ajjg. “v i ■ I I*? • The Standard of Quality The Mutschler Packing Co., for many years, packers of Beef and Pork have maintained a standard of quality that has made a name for this institution. Only the choicest of Cattle - - nearly all of which are raised in Adams County - - enter our plant. Through the individual Mutschler method, our meats are served in homes within a radius of many miles of Decatur. We arc always in the market for livestock, sheep and hogs and congratulate the farmers of is commun ity on their splendid livestock. Welcome to the Free Street Fair and Agricultural Show August 1 to 6 The Mutschler Packing Co Indiana Decatur
If ■ r Ap -J mW Swine Improvement Work Sponsored By Extension
The swine improvement work, as sponsored by the Extension Service, is the sponsoring of a plan whereby the sows are fed a well balanced ration during the gestation period that keeps the sows in a good, thrifty condition, but not fat. and having them farrow tn clean houses and the pigs range on clean ground, that is. gound that has bad no pigs on it for at least a year. When the pigs are two weeks old, the plan calls for self-feeding at a creep using the Park, is dead. She had been a favorite with tourists for past 15 years. Each year she raised twin fawns that always remained with her. until she had a family that made up a good-eized herd. She figured once tn the National Geographic Magazine. Death was from natural causes.
'allowing grain mixture: 70 pounds crack .’0 pounds cracked wheat 10 pounds tankage '! This mixture should be fed free choice until the pigs reach a weight 1 of 70 pounds, after which they can i i be full fed, corn and tankage or ■ other good supplement. The well : bred pigs should reach a weight .■ of 200 pounds or more in six months. In following the plan the i pigs should be farrowed so that j they may reach this weight in order to go on the market the latter ' part of August or early in Septemi. her. ■; John Schwab, the swine extension specialist of Purdue, has found J that the above plan works with- . I out fail on hundreds of Indiana farms.
