The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 1 January 1947 — Page 4

THE DAILY BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 1, 1947.

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with poik.

KIKAI. KUfitTKK NKKOS tiKOW l.VG, WICKAKU SAVS

WASHINGTON (UPi Claude ft. Wickard. chief of the Rural Weetrification Ailministmtion. Warns that the need for an expanded electric service is becoming critical in many parts of the

country.

Wickard said reports to REA disclose that fully half of the government - financed electric systems are unable to meet all the power requirements of their customers even now. The need will grow as farmers buy more and more electrical equipment,

he said.

co-operatives are stepping u; He added that nearly all REA their purchases of wholesale el-

ectric power,

••TVA. Bonneville and other i.gencies report that war-time

consumption levels have been - _

I maintained throughout the per- Alter the farm price index iod of reconstruction,” Wickard reached a high of 268 in October, said. ••Large industries former- it turned downward in November

ly engaged in war production are using just as much power for

civilian goods.”

He said the shortage also habeen complicated by the fact that many small industries, homes and farms are switching

meat-packing industry, at Sms- ss in mixing "dairy rJTWs i'tT cerfi .rilOifliPb ' ittldid fb It

time concerned principally begins with careful selection of ration the sire and dam which will A clean, dry well-ventilate! transmit desired inherited char- pen will help turthei to P™ aeteristies to the calf. The sec- I vent calf losses, since colt. ond step in eliminating calf los-1 damp pens cans* scours,

ses is providing a dry period for

the dam of six to ten weeks with PITTSBITR.H MAN WANTS liberal rations before the ealf is A.N I Nt SI Al. 01*1 ORTI N born. G. A Williams, Purdue j Tom Bain. Parke county treas-

has received a letter from

to 261. Purdue University agricultural economists report. This is still some 75 points above the

highest yearly average after! University extension dairyman. Urer,

World War I and .70 points above j says that in addition to these a Pittsburgh man who obvious y the previous high of August. (important precautions, the fol- thinks that western Indiana is 1946. At the same time prices lowing good dairy pracUces well out in the great open spaces. |

’A

even left the station.

“We cannot afford to assume points, that because during the war there was not an aeute shortage of power for war industries, shortages will not develop when farm people have opportunity to put electricity to all the profitable uses they have in mind,” he

concluded.

0

Erich Brandeis’

t u electricity for the first time, paid by farmers advanced foul ! should be followed; j He states that ht is interested in cannot afford to assume points. i The calf should be allowed to settling down some pace w te

_ . (nurse for two to four days, de- he can always make a decent IB -1 Pour short courses in agricul-! pending on its size and strength ! i»g and felt that property he

lure will be offered by Purdue! and no attempts at feeding the j for taxes would be available Thl . re Is a lot of talk about University School of Agriculture! calf should be made after he has { through the treasurer. juvenile delinquency. from Jan. 6 through Feb. 28. The (been weaned from his dam for. This is all the wants: "I i e You have talke a oil i . courses include general agricul-j 18 to 24 hours. Only clean, to be neat as large a ( it> oi \i ^have talked about i . ture. animal husbandry, dairy .sterile buckets should be used for lage as possible and I like to But hav e you ever seen j production and dairy manufar- [ feeding, and some dairymen fav-, have utilities such as running fie delinquency

Hirers. Courses are designed | or the use of buckets equipped city type water. The 1!*46 wool crop in North for those who do not plan to take I wdth rubber nipples i Dirty

Beware Coughs

from common colds

That Hang On

Dakota is estimated to be 5.159.- a regular college course and do-

per cent less than sire short work to train speci-

fically for a job in agriculture.

Creomulsion relieves promptly be ause it goes right to the seat of the .rouble to help loosen and expel ;erm laden phlegm, and aid nature « soothe and heal raw, tender, inlamed bronchial mucous memiranes. Tell your druggist to sell you t bottle of Creomulsion with the unlerstanding you must like the way it ulckly allays the cough or you are

o have your money back.

CREOMULSION or Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis

j 000 pounds, 1

in 1945.

The value of North Dakota farm real estate has increased .74 per cent from the average of the period 1935 t„ 1939. Hogs consume almost half the entire United States corn crop. Fupils of the of the bombina, or fire-bellied toad, are shaped like hearts when con-

tracted.

| The meat-packing industry, as such, did not become important until the nineteenth century. I The cranberry crop this fall is more than 800,000 barrels, close to a record. I The center of livestock producI tion is west of the Mississippi River, while the center of consumption is east of it. In the 1.840’s Cincinnati w’as known as “Porkopolis” because it was the center of the embry-

Eight preventable causes account for most of the farm fire losses. Those occurring in the winter are defective chimneys, sparks on combustible roofs, unsafe stove and furnace installations and misuse of electricity and appliances, reports F. R. Willsey. Purdue University safety specialist.

PROPER WEANING HELPS CUT LOSS OF CALVES

How the more than 50.000 heifer calves which will bp born on Indiana dairy farms this winter will be weaned and changed to suitable rations will have j an important effect on the calf losses which will occur on many of these farms.

buckets will cause scours. Whole milk should be fed the

ealf until it is at least four to

six weeks old. but the youg calf has a small stomach and overfeeding must be avoided as it is another cause of scours. Milk consumption is limited to four to

six pounds daily at first, gradu-,

ally increasing the amount to

eight to ten pounds per day, When three or four weeks old. ;

For the next three or four weeks, the milk allowance is de-

creased, with an equal weight j of warm water used to replace |

the milk. As the milk consump-

tion is reduced some conccntra- j tes such as whole oats and shell- j

as running jie delinquency in the making ? natural gas. i did a couple of evenings ago.

proper sewage disposal, electri and it was one of the most discity. railroad and bus depots and gusting sights I have even -seen,

other village necessities.

•‘My first choice is city prop- I had worked late and taken erty in the biggest town having the 9:15 train home to Conne-

tax sales, second choice, edge of cticut.

village farm with big acreage Three men and a woman came and house with several rooms in aboard, the woman carrying a good condition and not too old bottle of whiskey and holding a with big barn with concrete six-year-old girl by the hand

on hard One of the men

floor, silo and garage,

surfaced road: third choice, any kind of big acreage farm with

buildings.

••I do not want to spend much over *1,500. If the property is not even in a village. 1 would expect a ranch of about 1.500 acres with a house and barn for the

money.”

must have

been her husband, because he paid no attention to her. while the other were very attenive—too attentive. I thought. Apparently the four had had a few drinks before they got on the train. They were singing "Only five minutes more” on

top of their voices before wc

NO DOG AND CAT FIGHT HERE

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Time docs not dull the lustre nor weaken the solid strength of the monuments we supply. Handsome in design, reliably installed, their quality is everlasting.

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C'AI{M>A1> OP 1‘OI.ISHKI) AGAINST THE HEAD GRAIN—

FIRST HATE STOCK

HUNTING BOOTS

12 inch $6.15 16 These boots have a heavy leather top rubber foot-—heavy felt innersole.

inch $7.95 and a waterproof

The husband opened the bootlc and took the first drink out of it. Then he passed it to hia wife. The other two men had taken , seats across the isle, and the mother handed the bottle to her it to the gentlemen across the little daughter and said "Take way. You may just as well learn how to be a hostess.” The girl obeyed and then, at the command of her mother, went to the water cooler, filled paper cups with water and passed them around. By the time they reached their destination the bottle was 1 empty and all four of the adults staggered out of the car after having made more and more of a nuisance of themselves at every mile. Just before they left the little girl asked whether she, too, couldn't have a drink out of the bottle. ”No. you arc still a little too young," said the mother. But the father disagreed. "She might as well learn now" he said, passed the bottle to the six-year-old, who drank the last few drops that were still left and was on the way to juvenile delinquency.

VONCAi] WED. and THUR$,

I read and hear a lot about young hoodlums and dead-end kids and wayward minors and all that sort of rot. It is wayward parents alone that should be condemned. All children are born good. No thing on earth is nearer to God's own image than a child. It is wayward parents that befoul the way for their children and lead them down the path from decency to delinquency. That little gi*l on the train might some day have grown into a fine woman, a good mother and a loyal wife. What do you think is ahead of her now ?

M-G-M r'Ctust lt 0

XXX

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Marsha Hunt ami JohnCi get that old feelin' in "A U for Evie,” M-G-M comedy-# playing at the ViMu nstle Tht Wednesday and Thursday r the story of a lonesome prill

W C. FIELDS, red-nosed comedian of vaudeville and movie fame,

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