McCormick messenger. (McCormick, S.C.) 1902-current, November 21, 1946, Image 3

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* To replenish your apron wafOroba ; —mate this pretty corer-all apro^ )mr pert tie-on from the mmc po^ Item. Easily and quickSy ct«de — Syour ABC qMOfad for this ^ataea 34, St, 40, 44, t* and 44. •Siae 36, requires 2Vi yards of 36-inci laoaterial; tie-on style, 1% yards. I X ^ By W. J. DRYDEN w NWNS Farm Editor • Fall plowing will rid the soil of sxany insect pests. • Temperature for late-hatched chicks should be watched closely. Keep the fire burning in the brooder stove for two three days betore putting the chicks into { the house and ’ regulate it so . as to provide a ‘ temperature of ' 90° F. at the edge of the canopy. Avoid overheating. • Feeding the dairy cow in Amer ica is more an art than a science. Good feeders use roughage and grain to balance each other, poor feeders throw into the manger any thing they find convenient and in amounts that are handy. — C. F. Monroe, Ohio Nutrition conference. • Putting cultivated land into sod a ill increase the crop yields later on. • On farms where fowlpox has previously been a problem, it is good insurance to vaccinate young birds at least two months before they be gin to lay, pathologists at the Uni versity of Illinois warn. They also advise against the use in clean fleets where the disease has not been known in previous years. • A thrifty well-fed pig will reach the desirable weight of 200 pounds at six months of age. Economical gains may be scoured by the addi tion of fortified eod liver oil to a ration of corn meal, tankage and minerals. • Livestock losses are sure to fol low if farmers start feeding new 7 com too soon or in great volume. New corn will lead to severe diges tive upsets unless the animals art gradually broken into its use. o A new soil fumigant D-D holds promise of being of tremendouj value to vegetable and other growers •because of its toxicity towards suck j soil borne pests as wireworms, th* garden centipede and Nematodes. • At the present increase in Ot > American thirst for milk, by 19W * consumers will require 24 per aeor , more milk than they did before tb* . 1 war. ) i • Probably nothing so nearly re- 1 ; fleets the profits of a farm as tin ' ' number of rats that it harbors, fot the rat population is usually in in- • verse falio to the degree of sanita- i numlaiuei . McCormick messenger, McCormick, south Carolina November 21, . ^ * • • • makes this the Finest Bread in all of Claussen’s 105 years „ - of baking history! * t . ' —— — Today’s Claussen’s Bread is the very finest that even Claussen’s — noted for fine quality bakery goods for 105 years — hat ever produced! U. r • 1 For today** Claussen’s Bread is made from carefully selected highest grade white flours, blended perfectly to produce the whitest flour! And what’s more, this marvelous bread is now enriched through an improved enrichment process that brings you even more B vitamins. Niacin and Iron than ever before! Of course, Claussen’s Bread is always uniformly baked* ^ Ct. .1 Yes • • . Claussen’s is continually improving its products; is constantly on the alert for new methods, new equipment. And, as new ideas, new products are developed, Claussen’s will continue, as in the past, to he among the first to bring them to you! ' .y - S-* 'y* -J 4 * '41** •k iff*** V//, J? S' I; danSSteS Bread is. A js ; ,# # t Always Fresh At Your Grocer's __ •sk gUl m IT’S TRUE By Theodore Maisch The gross business of cigar stores md stands in the United States av erages about $3000 a year. In the year 1GS3 the postofflce cf Jreat Britain handled 1,000,000 !ot- •jrs aqd the revenue was $113,000. ,ight from a fireily is equivalent to j -054300 candlepower. French physicians used 57,00'',0''0 ••'cches in the year 1032. If air is 1 impressed to a pressure or CIO 1 ounds to the square inch its te:n- j-erature will rise to 000 degrees F. The gaseous Orion nebula is m tde ■ p of sueii v/idcly separated parti ’es • rat a quantity as large as the e at 4 -ould weigh only 200 tons. \,a: r makes up about 73 per cent of t*u human body. Starts Relief in 6 Seconds .from All 6 usual> • * ' ' \ . 'COLD PREPARATION /^TABLETS OR LIQUID Take only at directed PEOPLE'S OK LG STOKE MODERN TECHNIQUE . . . Arthur Telfer, 88, of Coopcrstown, N. Y., oldest photographer in the U. S., uses an ancient camera—a vaien one he built himself 69 years ago—as he prepares to photograph 18- year-old Bonnie Lynch. However, he employs the most modern posing technique a la the ship news photographer. McCORMlCK s. c. Trespass Notice INSURANCE ’^OUR LETTER Nfwnjj&l ‘ FOR A NlrifFt ^ ^ All parties are strictly forbidden to hunt 'or otherwise trespass on my place under full penalty of the law. B. P. TALBERT, R. 2, McCormick, S. C. Fire Insurance And All Other Kinds of Insurance In* eluding Life Insurance. nrr.ii C. BROVTN, McCormick, a. c. j