The Granger News. (Granger, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 21, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 28, 1927 Page: 2 of 8
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THE GRANGER NEWS—GRANGER, TEXAS, APRIL 28, 1927
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EH
V. -
-Vh-
Vi
We Are Equipped
to do any kind of a
Repair J ob
Goodyear and Goodrich
TIRES
Magnolia Gas and Oils
Official Light Test Station
Gar Storage and Washing
Accessories and Parts
WRECKER SERVICE
Frank's Garage
PHONE 12
HERE and THERE
How To Care For
Your Growing Chicks
• « • • ...»•• . COLLEGE STATION, April 27.—
Lord Palmerton, famous British The old proverb, "Cleanliness is
premier, kept his inkwell about 12 next to Godliness," must be followed
feet from the desk where he work
ed. The short walk Involved w;'l
every fresh dip made up his du
exercise,
for the successful growing of baby
chicks in the- Spring, according to
Professor I' H. R<jid, head of the
poultry husbandry department.,-A. &
M, College of Texas. Professor
Reid stresses the fact that cleanli-
ness in everything is the first prin-
ciple which must be strictly adhered
to iii baby hick raising. He advor
eates clean chicks in clean houses, fedj
clean food in clean dishes, and al-
The Reverend John Duncan found- lowed to run out only on land that is
"Why can't we have ccm
light around her^
1)
The Annual Rescue League pi
sented a medal of bravery to a t
that had -h< wn onusual heroism
rescuing one of its kitten.> fr<
drowning.
we
the first savings bank in
It village, Scotland, in 1810.
R
The word
times in the
in the Bible.
"and" occurs 46,27*
total of 773,746 words
PITHY PARAGRAPHS
SHERIFF'S SALE
THE STATE OF TEXAS )
COUNTY OF WILLIAMSON )
June is the month of brides. The IN THE COUNTY COURT OF
other eleven are devoted U divorces WILLIAMSON COUNTY, TEXAS
- Well Street Journal. ' EMIL PETRAS, PLAINTIFF, vs.
. * * J JOHN KALI NEC, DEPENDENT:
A news item says that w.i'sh/isj WHEREAS, by virtue of an exe
shelled a ( hine.se compound. We ,iust Clltj„n issued out, of the County Court
;t whs chop-suey —El 1 aso 11 »•-"*• . 0f Williamson County, Texas, on a
I judgment rendered in said court on
An admirer says Cal will 'u-;l: 'he h(i fit}) (]ny ()f Ju]y> A D 1917> in
Solid South in 1928. The muidle We.«t(fav6r ()f th;. sai(, Emil Petras and a-
gainst the said John Kalinec, No.
^ 12576, on the docket of said court, I
'-bin1.| di,|, on t^e 4th ,|ay of April, A. I).
10127, at 10 o'clock A. M, levy upon
all the interest John Kalinec had on
April l.r)th, 1926, in the fallowing
described tracts and parcels of land
situated in the County of Williamson,
inlestcd with bacteria. 1 he bugs get: State of Texas, and belonging to the
• licking at last.—Pittsburgh Ga-i
■rtte-Times.
is already broke.—Dallas N ws
* * #
New days are dawning in
says Senator Borah. It might e
more appropriate to spell it d-az-e —
Wall Street Journal.
* * *
Postage stamps are declared to be
free from poultry parasites.
"Chick houses should be cleaned by
scrubbing them with a hut... dlsinfcc-
tant, which is more effective than
disinfectant used cold," Professor
Reid said in a recent discussion of
1 the care of baby chicks. "Use boil-
According to the estimate of a jng , water to mix the disinfectant.
European specialist, there are four- After the house has been disinfected,
teen million bobbed heads in America■ a deep litter of straw or hay on the
from which 3,500 tons of hair have ; f]„<,r is a material help in keeping
been sheared or shingled. the chicks clean. If only a small
(juantity of litter is used it should be
The side saddle is again becoming changed daily. All feed and water
popular among the women ridets of | dishes must be carefully disinfected,
London. then allowed to dry in the sun as an
~~————• added precaution. Then fill them
Minor Princes and chiefs of India with c](Jan fee(j and water and your
are wearing squeaky shoes to im-l disease trouble will be greatly reduc-
press their barefooted subjects. Spe-!e(j."
cial shoes with squeaks (the louder! Professor Reid advises'letting the
the squeak the higher the price) are
made by several English firms.
Eleanor Hayne of Cooperstown,
New York, has twelve living grand-
parents, consisting of two grand-
mothers, four great-grandmothers,
chicks run out on the ground during
dry weather, if there Is green grass
and clover available. If the weather
turns wet and warm, the chicks
should be kept indoors until the wet
spell is over, as warm, wet soil is
more dangerous from the standpoint
two great-great-grand mothers,' twolf coccidiosis. if it is impossible to
grandfathers ana two great-great ,et thp chjcks out on clean land>
grandfathers. j lawn clippings and "ut green feed
J will help to keep them growing prop-
Tons of shoe polish are sent from, er,y Thechkks should be kept
England to Calcutta to meet the de- warm and drv at night. If any of
Tnand of the natives, who take the
pATHER has just come home
from his well-lighted office and
he doesn't approve of the family's
ideas on lighting.
Why should he when for less than
a cent an hour he can have all the
light he wants to read by.
Texas Power & Light Co.
Electricity Is Your Servant
greatest pride in keeping their shoes■
glistening to the highest degree
About one hundred words were ad-
ded to the English language during
the last year.
♦ » *
In a world all jumbled up with pol-
itics and revolutions, it is a glorious
thing that there is such a thing as
fishin'.—Baltimore Sun.
* * * 0
The wets assert that the next Con-
gress will modify the prohibition
law. This is always the thing mat is
done by the next Congress.—San
Diego Union.
* ♦ ♦
Bootleg liquor has revived that old
j said John Kalinec, to-wit:
Lots numbers One (1), Two (2),
Three (3), Four (4) and Five (5) in
Block Number Fourteen (14), Walton
Addition to the Town of Granger,
Williamson County, Texas; and,
All that certain tract, parcel or
lot of land, lying and being situated
in the City of Granger, Williamson
County, Texas, and being all of the
East Twenty-Six (26Vfe ft.) and one-
half feet of Lot No. 11, Block No. 4
in Walton Addition to the City of
Granger, together with the undivid-
saying about, putting the cart before ^ one-half (%) interest in a brick
the horse. Now it's putting the! WH» bet*een the bulld,np to™"™'
quart before the hearse.
American.
An American missionary
himself from cannibals by dancing
the Charleston. The .natives probably
figured that any man who took that
much exercise would be too tough to
eat.— El Paso Times.
* * *
A W. ('. T. U. lady in St. Louis'
says cigarette smoking and cock-
tail-drinking girls ought to be ex-
posed. Aren't they already exposed
as much as the nitls who don't
smoke or drink ?---Houston Post-
Dispatch.
* + *
If the Chinese tongs want war why
don't they go back home? St. Louis'
Star.
New York I anf' building adjoining
| same on the West and belonging to
J Frank Genser at one time: this be-
saved second parcel of land descrlb-
From the straw vote taken among
them two thousand co-eds of South-
ern California, it was found that
'cave men' ran far behind 'home
lovers' as preferred husbands.
at night.
them become sick they must be kept
j clean and dry first of all if they are
! to be restored to health. It is wise
I to remove diseased chicks at once,
and to save a larger number from in-
1 feet ion.
i The following feeding methods for
growing baby chicks are recommend-
| ed by Professor Reid: "It pays to
keep a growing mash before '.he
chicks at all times, but it is also a
good plan to feed a mixture of corn
1 and sorghum grains if. milk and oys-
Boy Scouts Prevent
Big Loss To Motorists
Many Spindles Are
Active In Texas
In a barber shop and beauty par-;ler ahDe)l available to be fed with
lor for dogs in London, England, the t' 1 suit to gm tu f,rii\\!n>,
charges for haircut and Jt'hu'ks plenty of preen feed' Some
SAN ANGELO, April 25.—Motor- DALLAS, April 25.—The United
ists here owe a debt of thanks to San States department of commerce an-
Angelo Boy Scouts, for there are nounced Monday that Texas had
509,061 less chances of punctures 243,528 active spinning spindles on
since that many nails were collected March 31, and that the tofal active
by the youths in the annual "clean-j spindle hours for the month were
up and paint-up" campaign just 86,883,640. The report shows that
closed. Some one with a penchant on the same date thruout the country
for figures estimated that at 50 cents! there were 37,035.710 cotton spindles
a puncture the boys have possib!y( in use.
In Russian factory schools/out of
8,2'>.*> pupils given a medio! exam-
ination 5,122 or ''2 per cent, were
found to be sick. Thore h.ivitv; tu-
berculosis numbered 1,347: anemia
2,5o2; nervous troubles, 1,102: and
so on.
ed in a warranty deed from John
j Kalinec, et al, to Petrolina Kalinec,
dated May 2, 1917, and recorded in
Volume 180, page 520, deed records
[ of Wjlflamson County, Texas, which
j deed, signed by all the legal heirs in
and to all the community Estate be-
tween John Kalinec, Sr., deceased,!
their father, and surviving widow,
Petrolina Kalinec, their mother, con-i
t veyed the entire one-half interest
which their said father John Kalinec,j
Sr., had and possessed in and to the
| aforesaid community Estate:
j and on the 3rd day of May. A. D.|
1927, being the first Tuesday of said!
j month, between the hours of 10
I o'clock A. M. and 1 o'clock P. M., on
I said day. at the court house door of
j said county, I will offer for sale and
sell at public auction, for cash, all;
the right, title and interest of the
said John Kalinec in and to saidj
property.
shampoo!t,hitk8 plenty <lf frreen feed
1 people do not get a good growth on
their chicks thru their failure to pro-
vide mineral material. Bone meal is
not expensive and five pounds ad-
ded to every one hundred pounds of
mash feed helps in growing large
framed pullets. Growing chicks will
do very well if fed largely on corn
and sorghum grains, with milk to
drink with oyster shell, or with bone
meal added to the ration. The fol-
When Raymond L. GathrighJt of lowin* is a *"od home-made ration:
Virginia went to his cellar to re-1 2(10 poun<is r'orn mea1' 100 p"unds
move some oysters from a barrel. he|shorts' 100 pouniis bran' 25 pounds
oyster shell, 25 pounds bone meal, 15
pounds cottonseed meal, 15* pounds
65 per cent meat scrap, 3 pounds
salt. Grain should be fed to the
growing chicks twice a day, in the
morning and evening.
vary according to the size of the an-
imal. The charge for the average
dog is $2.50 and for a St. Bernardv
$5.00
There are 2,130,000 licensed radio
listeners in England; 1,337,122 in
Germany; 238,000 in Sweden; 114,-
492 in Denmark; 53,070 in Hungary,
and 51,759 in Switzerland.
found that one oyster had captured a]
large rat.
In some circles of English society
the snuffbox -is again becoming pop-
ular.
In Great Britain the feet are used j
as an aid to identification arid it
has been shown that the inhabitants!
London have long slim feet, those
of Wales, low in the arch, and
of Scotland, broad in the sole.
I). E. GIRLS ENTER
CLOTHING CONTEST
saved motorists $254,530.50. The
eight troops also gathered over 80,-
000 tin cans and other rubbish, which
they piled into auto trailers for a
brief parade. There will be rewards
and the John H. Reagan school,
whose pupils put in a total of 2560
hours in cleaning up, and will receive
a State flag.
Who Knows?
The cotton growing states have a
lead over New England states of al-
most 4,000,000 active spindles in
March, the former showing 17,596,-
000 as compared with 13,853,000 for
the latter.
To Cure a Cold In One Day
fak- LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE (TabletO It
tr.e < ouih and Hradarhe and works off the
Cold. E CKOVE S signature oa each box. 3Uc
Mr. Gray—Give me a sentence us-
ing the word herewith.
Nora Mae—Gladys is right here
with me.
Motorists of Montana are fin:
splashing mud on the pedest
while passing thru pools of •
at a hiirh rate of speed. The b
the splash the larger the fine.
The inhabitants of cold courtries
make the darkest bread, of the rop-
ies the whitest. Cornstalks arc us-
ed as an ingredient in bread in Mex-
ico and Central America, dm i fish t°n Taylor
is used in Iceland, potatoes
land, chestnuts in Italy, and
lean years the bark of tree?"
sia.
Mildred Theis, Elsie Holuboc an'd
liose Maigie Denson will represent Grang-
i'er in the clothing .••ontest to "be held|]y so.
j in Waco Thursday, Friday and Sat-
for u'rday. In judging of the first
anV year class, Mildred Theis won first,
ater' Byrd Marie Jones second, and Ther-
,'ger csia Jurecka -third. Margie Denson's
party dress placed first in the sec-
j ond year das.-, with Jewell James
placing second. Elsie Holubec's
street dre s won first, Margie Den-
son's second , and Jewel! James
third. The judges were Mies New-
and Miss Edison of
Ire-1 Bartlett.
ring
Rus-
I have a profound respect for boys!
says Gri'my, ragged, tousled boys in'
the street often attract me strange-!
ly-
A boy is the man in the cocoon—j
you do not know what he is goiag to
become—his life is big with many-
possibilities.
He may make or unmake kings,!
Change boundary line? between'
States, wri*e books that will mold
charaters or invent machines that News Want Ads bring good Results!
will revolutionize the commerce of,
the world.
Every man was once a boy. I trust: ■ ■
I shall not be contradicted. It is real
Too Personal
Doris—Is that a rose growing on
your shirt?
Virgil—Of course not, crazy. Roses
won't grow on anything but dirt.
Doris—Then it certainly ought to
grow on that shirt of yours.
Very distinctly and vividly, I re-
member a slim, freckled boy", who
was born in the patch and used to
pick up coal along the railroad
tracks in Buffirlo. A few months ago!
I had a motion to make before the
Supreme Court, and. the boy from;
the "patch" was the judge who wrote
the opinion granting my petition. I
Yesterday I rode horseback past a
] field where a boy was plowing. The,
lad's hair stuck out from the top of
-Granger Hi Life.
News Want Aos bring'-good Results
[
I
I
i
Dated at Georgetown, Texas, this
the 4th day of April, A. D. 1927.
LOUIS LOWE,
Sheriff of Williamson County. Texas
The-
Granger Dairy
GOOD PRINTING at THE, NEWS
j A German doctor has pate
I clockwork aparatus to induce
I It makes a softly humming,
! onous sound for about forty minutes
I anil then gradually dies away.
Inez-
•d a| ter oil.
leep. Garag<
She Needs It
I want a quart of anti-chat-
Man—Where's vour car?
not- Inez I want it for Katherine.
■For Service !
To Stop a Cough Quick
tnko HAYES' HEALING HONEY, a
coutih medicine which stops the coufih by
healing the inflamed and irritated tissues.
A box of GROVE'S O-PEN-TKATE
SALVE for Chest Colds. Head Colds and
| Croup Is enckised With every boule 6T
' HAYES' HEALING HONEY. The salve
should be rubbed on the chest and throat
of children suffering from a Cold or Croup.
The hraltntf ftfrrt of Haven' Healiiil Money Id
•Mr the throat combined with the healing eff«-1 of
, drove • O-Peo-Trate Sal*e through the porrt of
| the >kln noon (top* a coufh
Both rentedlen are (tacked in one carton aud the
coat of the tomhioed treatment ii 35a.
Just a«k your druggist lot HAYES'
»aa.» ■ m*m-m m*m*m mmmmmkiHEALING HONEY.
The feathers used in the
of boas come principally fn
marabou, a st.ork-like bird,
ed' as sacred by many Afriear
iking
the
jard-
ibes.
Let Us Know Your
Wants
PHONE 118W
\
\
\
I!
•aine
iliiig
sub-
t-Liiiinu'i ; r
Joe—I don't know whether to have ready
a date with you or buy me a Ford.
From the early Babylon! i
The se\';lgPSimal tf.VS.U'ill nf
the day into twenty-fo ir ho
dividing the hour into :
and the minutes in'i .ee in<<
Safe In Saying
In 1903 there were 68 books for Elizabeth—You said you'd go thru
each 1,000 of our population; in 1911 fire and wat«>r for me.
there were 89 tor every 10": and in
1923 there were 115 for every 100,
his hat and his form was bony and
awkward; one suspender held his
trousers in place; his bare legs and
arms were brown and sunburned and
briar scratched.
He swung his horse around just as
I passed by, and from under the flap-
ping brim of his hat he cast a quiet
glance out of the dark, half bashful
eyes, and modestly returned my sa-
lute. His back turned. I took my hat
off and sent a God-bless-you down
the furrow after him. Who knows—
I may go to that boy to borrow
Expensive Rate money or to hear him preach, or to
Margaret- What are you going to beg him to defend me in a law suit,
do with thi' money you make this or he may stand with pulse unhas-
tened, bam .-.f arm, in white apron,
Henry—-Why
cigarette butts?
William Peopl
whole cigarettes.
does Buford smoke
don't throw away
to do his duty while the cone
is placed over my face, and night
and death come creeping into my
veins.
Be patient with the boyr.—You
are dealing with soul stuff. Destiny
Homer—Show me a combination waits just around the corner. Be
I the two and I will. j patient with the boys.—Exchange.
OUR *-
ADVERTISING
COLUMNS
are read by the people
because it gives (hem
news of absorbing in-
terest People no longer
go looking about for
things they want—they
go to their newspaper
for information at to
where such things may
be found. This method
saves time and trouble.
If you want to bring
your wares to the atten-
tion of this community,
our advertising columns
Should
Contain Your
Ad
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Alford, R. A. The Granger News. (Granger, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 21, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 28, 1927, newspaper, April 28, 1927; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth410817/m1/2/: accessed April 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .