The El Campo Citizen (El Campo, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 48, Ed. 1 Friday, March 8, 1929 Page: 5 of 12
twelve pages : ill. ; page 28 x 20 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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PASTURES CUT HIS FEED BILLS
two car fam’-
Make your tally
Notice Farmers
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broilers.
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dealer is In business to stay. It Is to
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March is bargain
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merely place a piece of bread
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Fix your breakfast ri&ht at the table!
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ach mssh pot
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roosts, but
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Drink _jy—^zt/
Delicious md Refreshing
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I SKIinUK I
_dB'Sur I Hevuuim
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'M
CMML-FORIR 40-UGffT C0*MW
*Ele&ricityr>- - - Your Cheapest Servant^
-four-wheel brakes—a score of fea-
tures that are combined in no other
oar. V ,
Your satisfaction will be still fur
ther assured when you buy your used
BULLETIN
BUICK MOTOR CO.
SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS
BY JACK PRATT
the Pratt-Cates Buick Company
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refreshes
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The recent clean-up in Chicago,
wherein 3,000 were jailed id one day
demonstrates what can be done where
there is a will to do it.
18
MILLION
a day
Coca Cola Bottling Co.
J. H. Priesmeyer, Prop.
■to®, •
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time 1 1-2
» bringing all
> to 40 cents
g upon your local
n the breed. At
r to separate the car from a Buick dealer. The Buick
the past 12 months or better still the
past 24 months. An ideal place is one ly. Keep your present car when you
with clean soil, well shaded with plen-
ty of green food. Shade is Important
during the hot summer months. Green
food is always important.
stage.
today and look over these
bargains!
riy’ hatched chicks
reeks to 12 weeks,
erels and either
market or fatten
* ton days. Early 1
HARDWARE PLUMBING f
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Six Cylinde
the economy
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mi
TORTURING PAINS
.7*1
•
.<c
A'J
■ins
v -ya
helped me. X tried several raae-
dies, but I continued to suffer. ~ a
“One day, I read about CarduL
Other women told how they had
gotten strong and well after taking
It I have often been thankful for
that day, for after I had taken Car-
dul for awhile, I felt like a different
himtn being.
“It did not seem possible, but I
did not suffer the old, torturing
pate and I really felt well I can
heartily recommend Cardui, for I
know how much I Improved after
I took ft. Since then. I have taken
tt several times when X have needed
a tonic, and X have always been
benefited. It is a wonderful help.’*
All good druggists sen CarduL
Tky it for your troubles. nc-196
&
i I have installed a Cotton Seed Grader and will
| hve it in operation on Friday and Saturday of
I each week. Come in and let’s talk over this
| important question of BETTER seed and
| more profitable crops.
master"* Automatic
Toaster and th'e
Hankscraft Auto-
matic Egg-Cooker.
And what Con-
veniences these two
devices are. In the
Toastmaster, you
in its slot, set the regulator
for the exact shade of toast
-------------------- I
Because the value of having two '
or more cars in the family is now so '
widely recognized, many Buick ow .
ners keep their present cars when
they buy Silver Anniversary Buicks.
In spite of this, however, the at-
tiWCttveness and the amaring value
of the Silver Anniversary Buick, will
result in many Buick models of pre
viods years, reaching the used car
market.
This opens a wonderful opportunity
in use^ cars. Thousands of miles of
Service means nothing to a Buick
The cars that are now being traded
In are good for years to come.* Next
to a new Buick they are the best
buy on the market They have all * the
basic Buick features that mean so
much in motoring satisfaction—long
wheel base—comfortable, roomy bo-
dies—wonderful power from the Bu
ick Valve-In-Head engine—Buick’s
jjjggt marketed torque tube drive—multpie disc clutcn
used car deal. Only in this way can
he be stirs that when you need ano
ther car you will consider purchasing
it from him. The Buick dealer, there-
fore, stakes his reputation and his
business future on every used car
he sells. * ! Tt
FARMERS’ NEEDS A SPECIALTY
We take particular care to stock every supply and kind of equipment that is
generally used on the farm. We have just what you need and can supply you with-
out delay.
A good farm is made better with adequate tools. Make yours the best. »
Don’t fail to see the line of farming implements that we are now showing.
Purity guards
the pause
that
I BuriNg March alone,
JLF we are running a spe-
cial campaign on tEe na-
tionally recognized “Toast-
you want, and forget it. In
a few minutes, the toast just
as you ordered, is automat-
ically ejected and the cur-
rent turned off.
In the egg cooker,
your eggs arc pre-
pared soft, medium,
or hard-boiled, as
you wish, and the
current is turned off
when they reach this
Come into our store
^^rowded traffic conditions today demand six-cylinder
performance—with its greater flexibility, greater
reserve power, higher speed and swifter acceleration.
And now—for the first time in commercial car history—
this desirable six-cylinder performance has been made
available with the economy of the four. For the new six-
cylinder Chevrolet trucks are not only offered in the
price range of the four—but they are as economical to
operate as their famous four-cylinder predecessors! Both
the Light Delivery and the 1% Ton Utility Chassis are
available with an unusually wide selection of body types
—and among them is one exactly suited to your require-
ments. Come in today. We’ll gladly arrange a trial load
demonstration—load the truck a4 you would load it, and
drive it over the roads your truck must travel in a regu-
lar day’s work.
Sedan Delivery, $595; Light Delivery Chassis, $400; 1)4 Ton Chassis, $545; 1M Too
Chassis with Cab, $650. All prices f. o. b. factory, Flint, Mich.
Rice Belt Chevrolet Co.
J. M. ZAPALAC, Manager
A*SIX IN THE PRICE RANGE OF THE FOUR
IT M
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Ath Carville
♦ el Campo, Texas
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Good pastures have cut dairy feed
bills in two for J. Ed. Boerger, Whar-
ton county, ‘Texas, who milks thirty
five cows, and who says he is now pro
ducing milk at a cost of 14 cents per
gallon. For three years he has done
this by planting 45 acres of a mix
ture of oats and barley every fall on
land that produced an Irish potato
crop earlier in the year, and by us
ing a Bermuda pasture in which he
sowed yellow bloom sweet clover a
few years back. The sweet clover
furnishes winter grazing when the
Bermuda is dormant, and by this
means a permanent pasture is pro-
vided. This is one of teh pasture
demonstrations fostered by J. O.
Graham, county agent, who introduc
ed sweet clover here in 1923 and
whose injunction, “Don’t plant too
deep, and only on a well-prepared but
.firm seed bed,’’ has enabled many
Wharton county, Texas, farmers to
successfully grow this valuable pas
‘ -ture crop.—Farm and Ranch. <
buy a new Buick. Or buy a used
car frbm a Buick dealer to use as
your second car. The extra conve-
nience and pleasure will more than
offset the moderate cost.. Thousands
of people are now following the twe
car plan. Ownership of two or more
cars pays big dividends in extra heal-
th and happiness.
Tells How She
_ To Find Any-
to Relieve Them
[ She Took CarduL
i, yy. V&7—In telling how she
flted by taking Cardui, Mrs.
’alkeft of this place, says:
“At one time, I had a very serious
spell which left me weak. At times,
I would suffer such Intense pains
across my back and in my side tbab
I could hardly stand ft.
“I endured this over and over
again. Every time the pains were
worse than before.
b the roost as early
rill prevent crowd
ir troubles, common
, It will help them
ckly. Some think
Des are caused by
This is not true in
aes. Faulty rations
ie of crooked breast
- of roosting chick
ping roost
jar of-the
teath side
ry netting
to go up
w will use
ich night
On a large
on the
__ may
hinged to the back ot the house sc
they can be raised up against the in-
side of back of house during cleah-1
, ing time.
Separate The M
In the case oi
remove the I
teoe them on
them for a ws<
Is from the pullets at between
9 weeks of age. This will make his beet interest to give you a fair
xna in toe house for toe grow-
lets. Crowding pullets in the
will retard their growth and
ash diseases as eolds and roup
ire going to sell the cockerels
we recommend crat^ or batte-
Oeing, on the other hand if
» going to ship them any dis
» the market, crate 6r battery
g them to not very profitable
they will lose too much en
Meh the commission merchant
uro off as shrinkage. A shrink
from 7 per cent to 10 per
ly be had on battery fattened
shipped long distances. For
g any of the good fatteners
used, mixed with milk prefer
t^^po^s
stuff them too much toe fiftt
rs of the fattening period, but
hem a little hungry, and the
•r 4 days give them all they
t 8 times a day. As soon as
le appetite dispose of them.
nge And Shade For Growing Chicks
rhe more nearly Ideal conditions
u can provide for your flock, the
tier they will do and less trouble
tm disease. It possible allow them
run out doors, on a well drained
age, wtae no chickens have been
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O ■ K COOP TO CBT V »I»I
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©@©©©®©©©©©©@©©©©®@©@@©©@@©®©©©©©©@@®
You Can Do
Your Own
fRepairingf
Building or altering in your spare time if you have proper tools. It will save you much
expense and employ spare time to good advantage. , z .
Why not supply yourself with the many tools at this store from the fine showing
that we have? You’ll find the kind and size that you want and they will soon pay
for themselves with the money you can save. .
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Ballew, W. L. The El Campo Citizen (El Campo, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 48, Ed. 1 Friday, March 8, 1929, newspaper, March 8, 1929; El Campo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1323116/m1/5/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Wharton County Library.