The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 30 January 1935 — Page 4
“Kingfish” Huey Directs Troops in Quelling “Insurrection”
Senator Huey (Kingfish) Long of Louisiana, is pictured, left, with his bodyguard in Baton Rouge where he personally directed the maneuvers of national guardsmen in putting down an “insurrection”
directed against the Long dictatorship in the state by the Square Deal Association. Right, guardsmen lolling on the ground with their guns stacked at the scene of the uprising which was quelled.
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Mr and Mrs. Beryl Ensor and Mr. and Mrs. S. O. Ensor spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Ellett Ensor. Mr. and Mrs. Marian Brattian spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Brattian. Mrs. Lena Shonkwiler, Mrs. Eula Staggs. Mrs Lida Pierce and Mrs. Violet Shonkwiler spent Tuesday evening with Mrs. Goldie Bee Funeral services for Waneta Fern Bowings, infant daughter of Mr and Mrs. Ernest Rowings were held Sunday afternoon. Burial was in Clinton Falls cemetery. Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Cox spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Davis. All members of the Clinton Falls M P church are requested to meet at the church Sunday morning at 10 o’clock, Feb .I. Mr. and Mrs. Elbert Bettis. Helen
Sanders. M; and Mrs. Abner Siglar. and Ed Bettis and son called on Mr. and Mrs. George Pierce Saturday evening. Mr. Hopper and family of Fincastle spent Sunday with Claud Crodian and family. Lilly May Burk spent the weekend with Lois Ball at Portland Mills. The Ladles Aid meeting scheduled to be held at the home of Mrs. Elbert Bettis will meet at the M P. church Thursday Feb. 7, in an all-day meeting. Women arc asked to bring carpet lags and quilt pieces and the men are requested to cut wood for the church. Tom Bettis and daughter spent the weekend at Greencastle. Eugene Broadstreet and family have moved from the Charlie Cloe place to a farm south of Greencastle. Frances Cox spent Thursday evening with her father, William Cox. and brother Jim. William Cox visited his daughter, Mrs. John Wells, lf.st week.
•!• -5- -K 4- 4 COALING STATION ❖ Mrs. Frank Woods *!• 4- 4 4
and Mrs. Harold Lisby were supper guests of Mr. aaid Mrs. Frank Woods Sunday. Mrs. Harvey Stewart called on Mrs. Harold Lisby Thursday.
! *
Mr. and Mrs. Everett West and i Mr. and Mrs. George Swisher were, in Indianapolis Sunday to visit Miss Lelia Garrett, who is confined in a
hospital there.
Mr. and Mrs. George Smythe called on Mr. and Mrs. Bud Mason Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lisby and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Woods spent Sunday in Indianapolis with Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Woods.
Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Shaw spent Sunday with relatives at Jamestown
»'• W EST .IF.I I’KRSON TWP. Mrs. Viola McCammaek *1* *1* •!* *1*
Revival meetings at the New Proviidcncc church ended Sunday evening with four additions to the church. Mr. and Mrs James Watts called on Mr. and Mrs. Chester Day Sun-
day.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Taylor of
Mr. and Mrs. Emery Nichols and ndianapolia have moved to the farm daughter Bertha spent Sunday with 1 formerly owned by Israel Lloyd.
Mrs. Jennie Sallust. Mrs. Anna
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Knetzcr. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lisby and daughter Floy spent Sunday in Indianapolis with Mr. and Mrs. Jimmie
Meeks.
Fisher and Mrs. Emma McAninch spent Friday with Mrs. Hubert Sel-
lers.
Marjorie McCammaek spent the
Mr. and Mrs Forest Walters. Mrs. weekend with Ernest McCammaek. Emma Whittington. John Brown. Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Chester Querry spent
Sunday with Harold Cox and family. Harry Wayne Watts called on Harry Msff last week. Mr. and Mrs. Cloyd Allen and Mrs. Leo Clearwaters called on S. B Dorsett and family Sunday. WEEKLY FARM & FOIT.TKY REVIEW Uv Willard Kolte I wonder how many of my farmer friends test their seed corn to see whether it is going to grow after it is planted. As far hack is I can remember and that is a good many years the farm journals and the agricultural colleges and the department of agriculture and in later years the county agents have been advertising and begging and imploring every farmer to test his seed com. Must be there are still a lot of fanners who are not doing it. or these good folks would not keep so everlastingly at us Are you going to test yours this year? And if not why not? No man out of the idiot class would think of going to the labor and expense of plowing and harrowing liis com land and then filling his cornplanter with buckshot ami planting that. Not by a jugfull but thousands of fanners will go right ahead and plant seed com that has little more chance of growing than so much buck-shot would have. Same kind of a brain that would load shotgun shells with coal dust and expect it to go off like gunpowder—because both of them are black. One poor ear of seed com will kill your profit on a good many hills— and I have tested hundreds of finelooking ears that did not have a single kernel of good strong seed on them. When com prices are so low that Uie average farmer fails to make any money on his crop, it is decidedly important for the smart farmer to get a better-than-average yield per acre because that is the way to make a profit—and the only way. I have about come to the conclusion that the average farmer is the fellow who never did make any real money out of farming. He is the farmer who never does things quite right. Instead of testing his seed com he figures that he will just plant a few
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Excitement... mystery... thrills... ron unleashed in a smashing dramatic story so startling the author dared not sign his name! PRESIDENf VANISHES
TONIGHT A THI RND.W
The selection, buying and preparation of the right kinds of Turkish tobaccos for making Chesterfield Cigarettes is a business in itself. . .
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with Edward ARNOLD VONCASml tonigh'i \ mi iisDu | —ALSO— Selected Short SuhjttU
Handling Turkish tnbaao the Liggett & M)ers modern factory at Smyrna, Turkey.
VVTE have buyers in all the tobacco markets of Turkey ami Greece, including Xanthi, Cavalla, Smyrna and Samsoun. And at Smyrna Chesterfield has built the most modern tobacco plant in the Near Hast. Here the spicy, aromatic Turkish leaf is sorted and graded under the eyes of our own tobacco men. Then it is put away to age in its own climate for two years or more to make it milder and better-tasting. When you blend and cross-blend the right kinds of aromatic Turkish tobacco with mild ripe home-grow n tobaccos as we do in Chesterfield you have . . . the cigarette that's milder the cigarette that tastes better
MONDAY WEDNESDAY SATURDAY LUCRISEIA LILY # RICHARD Mftl PONS BONELLI KOSTELANETZ ORCHESTRA AND CHORUS 8PM (C S T.) COLUMBIA NETWORK
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extra kernels in each hill or plant his hills a little closer together and then thin 'cr out if the stand is too thick. But when it comes thick he just never gets around to that thin-ning-out and we all know what hap-
pens .
If his neighoor across the road makes a success of alfalfa by deep plowing and under-draining and inoculating and putting on rock phosphate and limestone--the "average" fanner will do all of those things except maybe put on the limestone or inoculate Ho believes that a mixed flock of chickens will lay better because they are "hardier" that incubator chicks are "delicats" and that you can't afford to keep high-pro-ducing cows because Uiey eat so dang
much.
If anybody was to call me an average fanner 1 would be mad enough to hit him on the nose.
Dollar Idou
I Uiought that I knew something aliout finishing steers, but here is a new one on me and it looks good Prof. Thalman of Uie Nebraska Agricultural College writes in Nebraska Farmer that where there is a shortage of alfalfa or clover hay, and steers must be fed on com-and-cob meal and cottonseed cake, they are going to he short of lime. He recommends keeping a Ik>x or hop|>er of 10', feeding salt and 00", finely-ground limestone before the steers or feed them Moth jmund each per day if they must la- hand fed. If there is neither cottonseed cake or alfalfa there will also bo a shortage of phosphorus in which case the mineral mixture should be I0-, feeding honcmeul 10', ground limestone and ’JOG salt This also applies to i imshing baby beeves.
Dollar Idea
Iowa Homestead brings us Instiuclioiin , rom the Iowa Experiment Bin lion regarding feeling sorghum cane 1° livestock. They advise that it Is practically always safe to feral ,| ry I cured i sorghum cane, no matter whether frosted before cutting or not
hut it must be well cured.
1 he poisonous element is prussic ucid. and this forms in the plant if it Is left standing after a killing frost hut If the cane is thoroughly dried Irefme feeding the prussic acid most-
ly disappears.
Other experts state that sorghum makes nourishing and safe silage, but is too sour to Iks eaten freely unless it is mixed with other silage at the
start.
Dollar Idea
Ibis one from Uie American Poultry Journal. The Ohio State Expertnirnt. Station has been studying the USI hghts all night in some of their hiving pens, instead of turning the hghhs off 1„ the evening and on again in the morninng and they like the
idea.
Of course every puultryman
knows that Uie purpose uf A artificial lights in a hen house I give the hens longor to cat whal days are short. The gem ullyij ed plan throughout the entire aJ is to turn the lights on arouMI o'clock in the morning and Ml burn until daylight - then tun I on at sundown and let tnem bunl til eight o’clock in the evening| theory was that a longer feedii would do more harm than gixsl. | The folks over at Columbus I decided to find out whether then imything to Uiis idea of turning J off in the evening. Thus lar theyl not found that it inerra. i duction to let them burn all but letting the lights burn apptil does not harm and is iiuchl trouble. They avoid increasing cs using dim lights and placing immediately over the fn • hu|'i«|
drinking fountain.
Young' goslings are very ible to sunstroke and si oiiW ir| vided witli shade. One g"" I I'l^J fasten chicken wire to four and cover it with straw. Another thing that has mystified in winter is the ai I gosling* can’t stand g< t wet until they are sevi ia wrthl For this reason they should i turned out in the morning uitffl 11 "II the gi a.ss ' M one cold and stiff, wrap h 'dT cloth mid place R by tin itov» (
the chicken brooder.
I wonder what the wi '| to keep her babies out of tl' 1 1 Perhaps they air mon mWl than out Toulouse and KintxWI
imi<;s\ii| I will sell at public auction 1 <’ K Priest farm, thrci dfrt of Balnhrldge, seven miles 1 | <, I cel m ant Ic. on l Jim H bridge loud, the following l"^ on February 5, IM'I Bale to begin at lb a HORSES Oac black ' yeurs old. weighing about HCM COWS Two good milk <"'1 eight years old; One two ’ both giving a good flow ol hlilM SHEEP Twelve Ewes «'I Buck. HOGS one sow and fb'’ ^ weighing about 100 Ihs CORN: About 200 bu rib, thirty-five shocks of 'odder in field, about two W Bean Hay. FARM TOOLS One wag"' j cultivator, one harrow, one machine, one breaking l’ lu " cubators. HO egg. One brow If i’ll two dozen Brown Leghorn hcM f Other small articles too nui"^ too mention TERMS CASH C. C. Baker and Edna OWNERS « "I MIh iI Hunter. \i" - Cliarlm A. Marshall. l l
