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About The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 25, 1909)
RATION THAT IS BEST FOR THE DAIRY COW Common Mistake Made in Corn Belt Is to Feed Too Much Corn—By C. H. Eckles, Professor of Dairying, Missouri Agricultural College. The ordinary pasture grasses, espe cially blue grass, when in the grow ing state, contain the proper propor tion of nutrients to enable a dairy cow to produce the maximum amount of milk of which she is capable. The winter ration, on the other hand, is liable to have these nutrients out of proportion. This is one point where in common practice falls far short ot continuing the summer conditions throughout the winter. The feeding of a ration not properly balanced is one of the most common mistakes made on the average farm in the corn belt on account of the usual abun dance and cheapness of corn and corn fodder. Many farmers have corn fodder and timothy hay for roughness and prac tically nothing in the way of grain but corn. Prom such a selection of feeds it is impossible to make a ration that supplies the necessary nutrients for heavy production of milk. It is possible to make a fairly good ration using these feeds for rough ness, but it is only possible to do so by buying large quantities of mill The third summer condition, which we desire to continue throughout the winter, is that of a supply of succu lent feed. Bv the term succulent feed is meant feed having that property possessed by green grass. Such feed ; has a value outside of the actual nutrients it contains on account of its favorable effect upon the digestion of the animal. There are two methods in use for supplying this succulent feed during the winter season. One is the use of root crops and the other the use of silage. In some parts of the world the use of root crops is almost universal, and is the solution of the problem. In this state the use of silage is far more practical, however, than the use of root crops, and for that reason it is recommended ex clusively for this purpose. The following rations supply the necessary material to produce milk economically. If the cow will not give a good flow of milk in the early part of the milking period and when fed a libera! amount of one of these rations, it indicates she is not adapted by na : ture to be used as a dairy cow and Johanna, Holstein, Wonderful Wiscon sin Cow—Production for Year 1907-8, 13,186.2 Pounds of Milk, 477.96 Pounds of Fat (Average Per Cent. 3.62J; Net Profit, $95.31. feeds that are rich in protein. The I thing for the farmer to do is to raise the feeds he requires on his own farm, as far as possible, and it is possible to produce practically all that is needed to make a balanced ration. The place to begin in considering the feeding of an animal is always with the rough ness, since the character of the rough ness determines to a large extent the kind of grain it is advisable to feed. The cheapest source of protein is in legiminous hays, including clover, al falfa and cow pea. If an abundant supply of any one of these hays is on hand, the problem of making an economical balanced ration is very much simplified. The use of these hays makes it unnecessary to buy any cottonseed meal for ordinary dairy j cows, and makes It possible that the principal grain used be corn, which usually is our cheapest grain. Even ! cow pea or alfalfa hay alone, with corn for grain, makes a fairly good ration for an ordinary dairy cow. and such a ration could be substituted w-ith good results for that of timothy hay and corn fodder. When hay is pur chased. it is always best to purchase one of the kinds mentioned, as the price is about the same, or lower than that of timothy, which is far inferior as a milk producing food. If any hay is to be sold, from the farm it should be timothy hay and not clover or cow pea hay. FEEDS, SEEDS AND WEEDS A Danser to the Farm—By E. H. Jenkins, Director Connecticut Experiment Station. There are a number of mixtures sold as feeds which contain large quantities of seeds of undesirable and pestilent weeds of which a consider able portion are alive and will, under proper conditions, promptly germinate and grow. The weed seeds are not always quickly detected by casual inspection, because they are variously mixed with chaff and oat hulls, with linseed, bar ley and corn products and are often mixed or smeared with molasses. These facts are naturally not men tioned in the statements of composi tion, yet they are more important to the buyer than the chemical analysis. A moderate food value may be granted to ground weed seeds, or to some species of them, but it is very doubtful if small whole seeds are broken up and digested by the animal. It has been proved that fermenting manure kills many weed seeds when they are kept in it for some time, but common experience fully justifies the belief that the farm may be stocked with weeds which com along with the manure. should be disposed of. The amounts given are considered about right for the cow giving from 20 to 25 pounds of milk a day. For heavy milking cows these rations would have to be increased, especially in the grain, and for light milking cows the grain should be decreased. In making up these rations it is designed that the ccw be given all the roughness she will eat and sufficient amount of grain to fur nish the proper amount of digestible material. It is not designed that these rations should be sufficient or best adapted for cow-s that are being fed for making records, for wh.ch a very maximum production is desired regardless of expense. Some Good Dairy Rations. Pounds. Clover hay . 20 Corn . 5 to 6 Bran or oats . 3 to i Clover hay . y> Corn and cob meal. C to 3 Gluten or cottonseed meal. 2 Alfalfa or r ow pea hay . 1(> Com fodder . 20 Corn . 7 to 3 Bran .. 2 Alfalfa or cow pea hay .if. to 20 Corn . 8 to 12 Corn silage . jq Clover hay . Corn .5 Bran . 4 Corn silage . vfi Alfalfa or cow f>ea hay .. 75 Corn .8 to 10 refuse separated from grain, in order to make the latter marketable or fit for milling. These screenings vary a good deal in quality. Thus an analy. sis recently made here of wheat screenings showed about 33 per cent, of flax and shrunken cereal, 15 per cent, of foxtails, 8 per cent, of bind weeds and pigweeds. 15 per cent, of weed seeds of other species aid 21 per cent, of dust, broken seed and sand. Even such a mixture is much better than many others which often contain very iittle, If any, wheat or flax. An average price for screenings is $12 a ton in Chicago or $16 in Cincin nati. Mixed with molasses and chaff or hulls, and in some cases with really good feed materials, some of them sell at prices which are nearly as high as those paid for first-class feeds. Made In considerable part of in ferior materials and charged with weed seeds, they are dangerous on the farm. GROUND OATS BEST. Make an Excellent Feed for the Lay ing Hens. Some poultrymen feed ground corn and oats, and, together with veget ables, make a mash for the poultry. Wherever ground oats can be pro cured without the corn being mixed with it, the feed will be much better when the corn is in excess. Some millers in grinding corn and oats add more corn than oats, depending upon the comparative price of the two. For other stock, or for milk cows, such a food may be better, but not for fowls. If it can be done it is always better to have the oats and corn ground sep arately and mix the two in quantities ' and proportions to suit the require ments of the particular flock, as fowls should not all be fed alike. Some farmers have the habit of feeding fowls "whole oats, and we have seen a great many oats wasted in this roeth od of feeding. Oats consist of 11 hard husk which fowls dislike, says the Kansas Farmer, and much more good will be obtained from them if the oats are ground. In all events, plenty of grit should be supplied so the fowls may finish the grinding. Feed at Noontime.—Noontime is the best time to feed raw vegetable food* like cabbages, beets and turnips. 1 Weed seeds which are scattered abundantly wherever feed and feed residues are scattered, will surely make their appearance fn the fields Thus charlock appeared last year quite abundantly on the station land, where It had not been seen for 26 years at least. On searching for the cause, it appeared that the junkos or snowbirds had been fed with wheat screenings on a flat roof in the neigh borhood during a severe winter and the charlock seeds in the screenings had no doubt been blown from the roof to the lawn. Certain manufacturers claim to de stroy the vitality of the weeds which ihey mix with feed, but in no one of those above reported has even this measure of protection to the purchas er been thoroughly done. Ih has been apparently attempted only in case of tfc-t sucrene feeds. All of these weeds are characteris tic of grain screenings which are the IpCObN MEMORIAL f AT^SHIfSGTOS pl/uy or mcoi/Nc/L or mzARTv SUGGESTED DESIGN FOR LINCOLN NENDRIAL AT ROUND fond The national movement lor more beautiful and orderly towns and cities lias been growing remarkably since the Chicago world's fair pointed the way to better things. To-day art com missions exist in dozens of commun ities and are carefully working out local problems with the Idea of some day removing the stigma of ugliness and Inconvenience which foreigners have impartially placed, though they are ready to admit it is well deserved. But the communities have till now had to go it alone in the matter of beautification. The federal govern ment. which with the great amount and monumental character of its build ings might naturally be expected to lead the way. has been of very little help Indeed During its existence it has spent $500,000,000 in buildings, and a great part of that within twen ty years. The record is filled with costly and monumental blunders. It is doubtful if any country in history has so amazingly childish an accounting ot extravagant stupidity in its building operations. Yet practically the only check on further mistakes till now has been the architectural office or the treasury department, which, by the good sense of a single appointee, has in very recent years raised the stand ard of appearance and usefulness of the new post offices to something like real excellence. And now comes an important step. I President Roosevelt has appointed a council of fine arts, consisting of 24 architects, four painters, four sculptors and a landscape architect, ali men of j the highest standing. In making the appointments he issued an executive order directing that "before any plans are formulated for any buildings or grounds or for the ’ocation or erection of any statue, the matter must be submitted to the council I have named j and their advice followed, unless for ] good and sufficient reasons the presi-; dent directs that it be not followed. , The supervising architect of the treas- ! ury will act as the executive officer for carrying out the recommendations of the council.” At the same time Senator Newlands of Nevada introduced a bill in the up- J per house legalizing the council as an advisory board and making the office of supervising architect of the treas- i urv a bureau of fine arts, to superin- j tend all matters relating to the con- j struction and placing of federal build- j lngs of all departments and all ques tions of their decoration and furnish ing, the purchase or acceptance of paintings or sculpture, and the pur- j chase and planning of public parks coming under federal authority, all with th advice of the "council of thirty,'' as it has been nicknamed. In the meantime the house, as a counter move, led by Speaks Cannon, is trying to pass what is known as the McCall bill. This bill makes aD appropriation of $3,500,000 ..o buy 36 acres of land between the capitol and the new Union station, and provides anoth:r $1,000,000 to build thereon a memorial to Lincoln. The site is gen erally regarded as most unsuitable to the purpose, and architects and artists are almost, if not wholly, unanimous in condemning it. President Roosevelt especially requested that the newly appointed council take the matter up at once. Most of its members are on record as favoring a very different site. The whole question of the arrangement of Washington has been worked out in great detail, and what is known as the Burnham plan, based on the plans made by Maj. L’Enfant under the su pervision of President Washington, is j accepted by experts as the last word on the subject. Its fulfillment would undoubtedly make Washington the most beautiful city in the world. This plan included a great mall from the capitol to the river, with the Washington monument in the center, forming an axis for a cross mall or park terminating at one end in the White House and at the other in an other great monument still to be built. The main mall would terminate at the river in the Lincoln Memorial, for NO HOPE THERE! “If you have any influence on the ner served soon.” “Me! I haven’t the slightest in Gradually the methods of peace are superseding force in the adjustment of differences between the great na tions, and small ones will fall in line for similar means of adjustment as time goes on. The prophecy of Ten which a beautiful sketch design was made, and in a memorial bridge across to Arlington, with driveways along the river shore. This site the government already owns and the Influence of the Ameri can Institute of Architects and sym pathetic bodies so far has been suffi cient to keep new building operations wdthin the plan, though congress was at one time very close to giving the Pennsylvania railroad a gr^at terminal site in the very center of the proposed mall, halfway between the Washington monument and the capitol, a calamity that was only averted, be it said, by the public spirit and generosity of the late Mr. Cassatt, president of the road. At another time the department of agriculture’s new building was designed to be placed in the center of the Mall, though better sites adjoined it. The Union station was finally placed on Capitol hill, about a quarter of a mile to one side of the capitol. and a little back of its transverse axis. Be tween the station and the capitol there is a broad, straight avenue, so that the visitor's first sight of the city is a clear and imposing view of the gray pile with its magnificent dome. The Capitol square reaches half way to the station, and two of the sub sidiary buildings are erected along its boundary'- The senate committee building is toward the station. The proposed site for the Lincoln memorial is beyond this building toward the sta tion. and it is very obvious that, being thus near the station, it would not add in any way to the beauty or majesty of the capitol or the capitol group, would not in fact be a part of it. and would obstruct the view of the capitol and thus rather tend to detract from it. On the other hand, it would be a truly magnificent decoration for the railroad station, as all admit, but senti ment is decidedly against using a great national memorial to such a man as Abraham Lincoln for any such purpose, nor is the station so unlove ly as to need hiding in this fashion. A proposal to place the smaller Colum bus monument at the station has, how ever, met with popular acquiescence. Such is the situation. On the one hand is the station site, championed by Speaker Cannon, and on the other a site chosen by the famous Washing ton park commission, and which will unquestionably be approved by the “council of thirty," as it has been by practically every architect of note in the country. Here is the personnel of the council: Architects—Cass Gilbert of New York, C. Grant La Farge of New York, S. B. P. Trowbridge of New York, John G. Howard of San Francisco, Glenn Brown of Washington, Thomas R. Kimball of Omaha, John L. Muren of St. Louis, D. A. Burnham, director of the Chicago exposition; John M. Donaldson of Detroit. George B. Post of New York, Arnold W. Brunner, president of the New York Chapter of the American institute; Robert S. Pea body. president of the Boston Society of Architects; Charles F. McKim, of McKim, Mead & White; William S. Eames of St. Louis, James Rush Mar shall, president of the Washington Chapter of the American institute; Adam Garfield of Cleveland, William B. Muedie of Chicago, Frank Miles Day of Philadelphia, and C. Howard Walker, editor of the Architectural Review. Painters—John La Farge, F. D. Mil let. E. H. Blashfieid and Kenyon Cox. all of New York. Sculptors—Daniel Chester French, Earl Bitter, Herbert Adams and H. A. MacNeU. Landscape architect—Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr. Wreaths on Poet's Grave. On the poet Byron’s grave in the parish church at Hacknall Torkard two lovely wreaths, one being a poet's cir clet of bay leaves, bearing on a card: "From Laura Thyrza Byron, in remem brance,” were placed the other day. The telephone business is picking up in China. Peking . ow has 1,700 subscribers. mistress of the house, try to get din 1 uenee—she's my wife!” nyson, who In “Locksley Hall” 30 years ago, foresaw The Hague court and amplified it into a federation of the world, is being fulfilled. The “bat tle flags are furled” a great (leal of the time now. CAN CONSUMPTION BE CURED? National Association Warns Against Use of Quack Remedies. In view of the constant agitatiofl and misrepresentation with regard to the treatment of consumption, the National Association for the Study ana Pre vetion of Tuberculosis has iBsued a statement in which it states that the only sure cure for this dis ease is fresh air, rest, and whole some food. Hardly a week passes without some quack “'doctor” or ' eminent special ist,” informing the public that he has at last discovered the sure cure for tuberculosis. After examining every one of these so-called cures, several hundred in number, the National Association states that, one and all, they are misrepresentations or fakes. Two Classes of “Cures.” These so-called “cures” are divid ed into two general classes. The first class of "cures” includes the quack remedies and nostrums with which the public is being constantly de ceived. These range in kind from "good whiskey” to pig’s blood or ultra-violet rays. Some few of them, for instance, are cod-liver oil, lime dust, malt, vegetable teas, and num erous inhalations of supposed germ icides, besides a large number of well-known patent and proprietary medicines and numerous disinfect ants. None of these are cures for consumption. They are rather for the most part of a dangerous char acter. and patients who take them may be running a serious risk. Con sumption is caused by a germ which destroys portions of the lungs cr other affected tissues. No drugs, medicines, inhaled gas, or home-made remedies can, by any means, kill the germ or close up tne cavity in the lungs, as is so often claimed for these specifics. Neither is it possi ble to inhale a sufficiently strong germicide to kill the consumption •germ. Such an inhalation would kill the patient before it would kill the germ. Another class of "cures" for con sumption, by which many people are deceived, includes the secret reme dies advertised by unscrupulous "doctors” and “professors” at the heads of so-called “institutes." These people advertise that they can cure consumption at- home by means of remedies which are secret and known only to them, or sometimes they ad vertise that they can cure consump tion at the “institute” where he claims he has a drug which will surely cure consumption. A "doctor” in Minnesota says he has a new remedy wfhich he himself will ex ploit for the benefit of humanity. A Colorado specialist has advertised a new method of curing the disease. A St. Louis druggist claims to have found how to "dynamite” tuberculo sis germs. An “institute" in a west ern state has been opened recently, which pretends to cure consumption, without resort to fresh air treat ment, largely by means of massage, osteopathic manipulations and some secret methods. Again, the National association asserts that the very fact of secrecy in these cases tends to discredit the so-called cure. No responsible physician will find a cure for disease and refuse to make it known because of pecuniary motives. Cure Possible. These two classes of “cures" are not “cures" at all. Consumption is a curable disease, however, and in some places more than 75 per cent of the patients under treatment have been restored to health. The essentials for the cure of consumption are rest, fresh air and wholesome food. A large number of physicians have been working for years to perfect a vac cine, or anti-toxin for tuberculosis, or to find some agent such as tuber culin which will assist in the cure of the disease. Thus far, the experi ments have not furnished a product which will either absolutely cure or prevent consumption, or render the patient immune against the disease. Many of these serums have proved effective in increasing the resistance of the patient and thus helping in the cure, but no scientist of repute to day claims to have discovered a tu berculin which will produce a cure without the combined aid of fresh air. rest and wholesome food. For information address Nebraska Asso ciation for the Study and Preevntion of Tuberculosis, 408 City Hall, Omaha. FLEET TO TAKE PART IN PARADE Admiral Sperry Will Send Battalions to Washington for Inaugural. Washington.—Admiral Sperry sent by wireless telegraph to the Navy de partment the names of the battleships of his fleet, which will remain at an chor in Hampton Roads until after March 1, in order to send battalions from their crews to the inaugural parade in Washington. These vessels are the Connecticut. Virginia, Louisi ana. Wisconsin. Georgia. Illinois. Kearsage and Kentucky, the last three of which will be placed out of commission on their arrival at their home navy yards,. Revolting Crime in France. Marseilles, France.—The discovery of a revolting crime, recalling in de tail a case which occured in Paris in 107. has caused a sensation here. The body of an 8-year-old girl, torn by twenty-eight knife wounds and further mutilated by burns, has been found in a populous quarter of the city. It was learned that the child .had been ill treated before being killed. A man who had been living with the girl's mother, who is a widow, has been ar rested. but his guilt is as yet un known. Grand Duke Vladmir Dead. St. Petersburg.—Grand Duke Vladi mir, who had been slightly in f0r some time, died suddenly here. One of the attending physicians visited the grand duke and spcke most reassur ingly of his condition. Half an hour later, while taking tea with the mem bers of his household, he was seized with asthmatic spasms and died al most before a priest arrived. The grand duchess was present at the time and his sons. Grand Duke Bores and Grand Duke Andrew, arrived a few minutes later. W e know of no other medicine which has been so suc cessful in relieving the suffering of women, or secured so many genuine testimonials, as has Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. In almost every' community' you will find women who have been restored to health by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg etable Compound. Almost every- woman you meet has either been benefited by it, or knows some one who has. In the Pinkham Laboratory' at Lynn, Mass., are files con taining over one million one hundred thousand letters from women seeking health, in which many openly state over ! their own signatures that they have regained their health by taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has saved many women from surgical operations. Lydia EL Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is made ex clusively from roots and herbs, and is perfectly harmless. The reason why it is so successful is because it contains ingredients which act directly upon the female organism, restoring it to healthy and normal activity. Thousands of unsolicited and genuine testimonials such as the following prove the efficiency of this simple remedy. Minneapolis, Minn.:—“I was a great sufferer from female troubles which caused a weakness and broken down condition of the system. I read so much of what Lydia E. Pinkham’s * egetable Compound bad done for other suffering: women, I felt sure it would help me, and I must say it did help me wonder fully. \V it bin three months I was a perfectly well woman. “I want this letter made public to show the benefits to be derived from Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.”— Mrs. JohnG.Moldan, 2115 Second St.North, Minneapolis, Minn. W omen who are suffering from those distressing ills peculiar to their sex should not lose sight of these facts or doubt the ability of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound to restore their health. For DISTEMPER Pink Eye, Epizootic Shipping Fever & Catarrhal Fever Sore cure and positive preventive, no matter how horvec* at any age are Infected or * '* Liquid.given on the tongue, acts on the Blood ana Gland* expel* the Ktsonoos germ* from the body. Cures Distemper In Dog* and Sheep ami Cholera In ultry. Largest selling livestock remedy. iSiree Lajftrtpoe among human being* and 1* a fine Ktdney remedy. 60c and fl a bottle. ifiand tlO a dozen. It. 8how your druggist, who will get It foryou. tree Booklet, and Cures.*’ Special agent* wanted. (*ut this out. Keep Distemper. Causes SPOHN MEDICAL CO.. Chemists end Bacteriologists 60SHEN, IND., U. S. A. Are You Protected against pneumonia, which so often comes with a sudden chill, or con gestion of the lungs—the results of neglected colds ? If noi you should have a safe and sure rem edy at hand all the time . DR. D. JAYNE’S EXPECTORANT has proved to be the most eff rctive rem edy known for colds, coughs, pneu monia, bronchitis, inflammation of chest and lungs. It relieves and cures the disease by removing the cause. Get it today and you’ll be ready for tomorrow. Sold evcryuhere in three size bottles, SI 00. 50c, 25c. Tired Women can get back the strength they used to have if they will take a treatment of the famous tonic laxative herb tea, Lane’s Family Medicine (called tiiso Lane’s. Tea) Its cost is only 25 cents a package and a package will last a month. It cures backache, sideache, bearing-down pains, indiges tion and constipation. All druggists sell it, 25c. Vk n 45 to 50 Bu. of Whent Per Acre have been grown on lim lands in WESTERN CANADA Much lea would be satisfactory. The gen eral average is above twenty bushels. “Allare loud in their praises of the great crops and that won derful country.”—£r tract from correspondence National Editorial Association of August, 1908. It is now possible to secure a homestead of 160 acres free and another 160 acres at $3.00 per acre. Hundreds have paid the cost cf their farms (if purchased) and then had a balance of from $10.00 to $ 12.00 per acre from one crop Wheat, barley, oats, flax—all do welL Mixed farming is a great success and dairying is highly profitable. Excel lent climate, splendid schools and churches, rail ways bring most every district ivithin easy reach of market. Railway and land companies have lands for sale at low prices and on easy terms. **Last Best West” pamphlets und maps sent free. For these and information as to now to secure lowest railway rates, apply to Superintendent of Immigration, Ottawa, Canada, or the authorised Canadian Govern ment Agent: W. V. BENNETT. HI New York Lite Building. Omaha. Nebraska. DEFIANCE STARCH— —other starches only 12 ounnaii —me price and “DEFIANCE” IS SUPERIOR QUALITY. FOR LITTLE FAT FOLKS Most grateful and comforting is a warm bath with Cuticura Soap and gentle anointings with Cuti cura. This pure, sweet, econom ical treatment brings immediate relief and refreshing sleep to skin tortured and disfigured litt’ ones and rest to tired, fretted mothers. For eczemas, rashes, itchings, irritations and chafings, Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment are worth their weight in gold. Bold thmwrhrut the world. Depots- London 27 Charterhouse 8q.: Pans. 5. Rueriela Paix; Austral Ha. K. Towns \ Co.. Sydney; India, R K Paul Calcutta; China.. Hong Kong Drug Co.: Japan. Manjva, Ltd., Toklo; Russia, I'errein. Mooco* ; So Afrtca. ]<ennnn. Ltd.. Cape Town etc.; U.g A Potter Drug & Chem. Corp.. Bole Propa^ Bimon For 16cJ Everybody loves earliest vegetable* i ' ami brilliant flowers. Tlierefore. to^ gain you a* a customer we offer: 1300 kernels Fine Onion Seed. . 1500 " Rich Carrot Seed. 1300 “ Celery. 100 Parsley. . 1300 “ Juicy Radish Seed. 1300 “ Butt uceSeed. . 1500 “ Te- nip Seed. 1 1500 “ Sw baeaS'd. 100 “ M: ,u0 Tomato. 1200 “ BriiliimuswerliitAuuli . In all 10,000 kerne:s of warranted ^ nortb»»m grown Med*. well worth Si .00 of an y man's money (tncludtng Big Catalog) all postpaid for but 18c in stamps. A And if you Bond 20c we add a pack / agt-of Earliest l*eei>< >’Day sweet ('orn.% Big Plant, Tool and Seed Catalog free to intending buyer*. Write lor [ Vame today. TIlE JOHK A. SALZER SEED CO. « LaC30SSE. WIS. W 1 TEXAS STATE LAND Millions of acvsof »c:*k>1 land to be so id by the State. tl.Ui to &.U) per acre; only one-foruetb rasi and 4b years time on balance; three per cent mer est; only f 12.00 cash for 1€0 acres at CLOU per arm Greatest opportunity; tr«*»d agricultural land: send l£) cents for Bool, of lnstructuuisand New State Law .1. J. Snyder, Sr boo J.an Locator, 180 8 l» bL Austin, Tex. K ?f ere nee, Austin National Lank. DEFIANCE Cold Water Starch makes laundry work a pleasure. 16 oz. pkg. lUo