Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

Great Bend Tribune from Great Bend, Kansas • Page 6

Location:
Great Bend, Kansas
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PAGE SIX. TH3B GREAT' BEND DAILY. TRIBUTE, 3f ARCH 24, 1917 tm Rpveral cecDlc who went to the school fair were so disgusted they "MWWWWMWMMWWWWBWWWMMMWWMBMWMMWHMMBBBWM MBWWMMPWftiitflW'MW'Wif 'lfflrintriifflljiiiimimil nlmil ill HHliin i UNI" WWnftllHWldt llAllllH "HUM llHI'l I jMWjhtWllh HI, (-- I1! for got to register for the rrizes and Inst out a little on them. And wp heard of a motorcycle accident too. El'JES AND U.3BS AT LAffliiG TlhlE The First Few Minutes in the Life of a Lamb is the Host ritical Period A iaree number of neople plan to atteftri the funeral of Mr.

Hankin at the west church today. Mr. G. A. Gell, Mrs.

Mary Specie, Misses Cora and Arletha Geil and i ne Glassy tuar Andy Leroy were visitors to the Fend during the week. Mr. and Mrs. Andy, Leroy attended KEEP EWES Ifl GOOD GOHDITIQIi the last dav exercises at District 93 99 which closed today. Mrs.

O. A. Geil ind sons visited at the Both home Thursday evaning. the easoTt We can claim the best gardener of Care of Sheep as Explained by A. M.

Paterson, Kansas Agricultural College, Manhattan, Kansas. Barton county not the state. Mrs. Andy 'Leroy "planted her lettuce, radr ishes and ether things Monday and for supper Wednesday' they had both lettuce and radishes. We think this f' A ft.

is i I I fff I yMo i -y life iiM Mnii' iii i inmm iwmiiwi'iiiw nui. Miinmni ttm vi ii.MMMmiii.m im. nt'i jgilrtv-ranii fin hm i iiriin mi in linn in niiiiiiiiiiiMrii ruinn mM is a record for quick and efficient work in this line. armnion As the time approaches for the lambing season the flock should have a little more attention. Ewes that are in poor condition should be sorted out by themselves and given a little extra feed; this feed should be such as will stimulate the flow of milk.

With alfalfa or clover. hay for roughness, a pound or one and one-half pounds of grain daily should put the flock in excellent condition. A good mixture of grain at this time wonld be sixty per cent of corn chop, thirty per cent of bran, and ten per cent of oil meal. If the flock is in good condition, the proportion of corn might be decreased or eliminated altogether. Oats and barley make an excellent substitute for but are generally too expensive DISTRICT 93.

We have been having plenty of those "Bone Dry" winds here lately. August Ehultz went to Kingman county last Tuesday where he is thinking of buying a farm. Mr. and Mrs. Chas.

Neuforth went to Great Bend Tuesday. Some of the people are sowing oats in the where it Is mostly all killed out. A little boy was born to Mr. and Mrs. George Applegate last Friday night.

Forest Pelton went to Great Bend Thursday evening to attend the play given by the G. B. H. S. Harry Neuforth attended the sale at Lorimor's last Tuesday.

Ed Witt ordered a new Ford last week, in Kansas. When the lambs begin coming and! especially if the Weather is cold and disagreeable, as it often is in March, close attention must be given the flock The year 1917 is producing some of the classiest cars in motor-dom, but the Marnion heads the list. If you didn't get all the information at the show you want, write us, we are the sole agents in Barton countjh Special demonstrations on request. Leave your name with us for a private showing after the close of the exhibition. if all the lambs are saved.

Many newborn lambs are very delicate, and if the flock has not been properly fed and cared for during the winter sea Miss Anna Smythe, trombone and vocal soloist, with the Giersdorf Company at Regent Theatre, Thursdav, Friday and Saturdav, March 29, 30 and 31. son often the lambs are. weak and FACING ANOTHER FOOD CUT. have not strength enough to get up and nurse. If a lamb gets badly chilled before it gets up it soon loses all hopes of life, and unless attention is given it will be lost.

Then many of the ewes will have twins, and some triplets. In cases of this kind one Iamb may be weaker than the other and is frequently neglected by its mother. Pens about four feet square should be provided for the ewes to Undertaking Embalming Call the E. R. Moses Mercantile Co.

for Caskets, Ecabalming and Ambulance. Broadcloth caskets, trimmed complete, regular price $65, for $35. All others in proportion. Embalming $12. Funeral Car $8.

Calls answered night or day. J. B. WILLIS. Emb aimer and Funeral Direct Phone 256 Black Phone No.

9, E. R. Moses Mercantile Co. Phone 144, E. R.

Moses, Jr. lamb in. This protects the young lambs from the rest of the flock and RIM AHLG ROS, keeps them from getting separated Amsterdam, ia London, Mar. 24. The bread ration Jn Germany will be diminished one-fourth beginning April 15, owing to th scarcity of wheat, according to a di3 patch from Berlin in the Weser Zeitung of Bremen.

The potato ration will be continued at five pounds weekly and the meat ration will be Increased by 250 grams weekly. It Is announced, adds the dispatch, that the curtainment in the "Use of vrheat if to Insure the present stocks lasting until next harvest. The announcement of the bread ration reduction has caused surprise and consternation in Germany. The Cologne Volks Zeitung says editorially: "If the measure is absolutely necessary it must be accepted, but it must be stated that for many the limits of the bearable are thereby exceeded Eveh now it is only with great, deprivations that the industrial populations of the towns manage with the bread rations." from their mothers. A portable bur-die which may be placed around the ELLINWOOD, KANSAS ewe when lambing is inexpensive and serves the purpose.

It sometimes hap- pens wnere twins are born that the-mother will refuse to own the weaker lamb. In a case of this kind take the stronger lamb away for an hour or two and the mother will usually turn her attention to the other lamb, and County News DISTRICT 11. got the map offered by the Great Bend Furniture Company for the school fair. It is a beauty and we are all proud of it. The wind last Friday was quite a trouble maker.

It put Gus F4eehers windmill out of commission, and Gus is having quite time fixing it. Then JASS MUSIC THE LATEST. Have you ever listened to the weird by a Carranza official from Chihuahua City, who said General Murguia left there yesterday for Jiminez, en route to Farral to engage the Villa rebels. when the stronger lamb is put back with her she will dwn them both. In case one ewe has lost her lamb and another has twins or triplets, one of them should be given to the ewe that has lost her lamb.

Sometimes there is a little trouble in getting the foster mother to own such lambs, and it may be necessary to tie her up with a small rope halter or in a small stanchion for a day or two so that she cannot injure the lamb. Some shep I noise made by a jass band? Such an The Better the Printin If 3 When Better Cars Are Made DROWNED HER BABY. St. Louis, March 24. An unidentified woman threw a baby about! 3 years old into the Mississippi river from the Eads bridge here last and a minute later scrambled over the rail and fell to her own death.

The bodies have not been recovered. of your stationery the bettci the impression it will create Moral: Have your printing done here. organization is now play at one of theupton cabarets. When the lead6r of the band was asked to explain just what Jjass music was, he said: "A jass band is composed of oboes clarinets, cornets, trombones, banjos and always a drum. It doesn't have to have all these.

But the music is a matter of the ear and not of technique. None of us knows music. One carrier the melody and others do what they please. Some play counter melodies, some play freak noises and some just play. I can't tell you how.

kWillMak e- i hem vac You got to feel jass. The time is syn- i You Can Cut herds advise taking the skin from the dead lamb and rubbing it thoroughly over the lamb that is to be changed. The reason for this is that ewes recognize their lambs largely by scent, and if the scent from the dead lamb is fastened on the lamb being changed the ewe will usually quickly claim it as her own. It is also sometimes helpful, where lambs are being changed from one ewe. to to milk a little from the ewe that is to adopt the lamb over the lamb but the halter or stanchion will usually be found sufficient and less bother.

Attendants should see that the young lamb gets up and nurses by the time it is fifteen or twenty minutes old, and when it is once up and full of milk there will be little need of giv ing it further attention. In case the lambs should have been dropped without the attendant being present and have become badly chilled before being found, they should be taken in by a fire. If this is not convenient, a jug of hot water set in a covered box will aid greatly in reviving and drying oft copated. Jass, I think, means a jumble. We came from New Orleans by way of Chicago.

In Chicago a professor told us it was 'the untuneful harmony of I den't know what he meant, but I gueis he was right. Anyhow, that's Tho weird. effects of jass music makes one dance with every part of oen's body but the feet -New York letter to the Pittsburgh Dispatch. Your high cost of living down by using the Cypress Incubator. WOMEN CONDUCTOR fcOJDIOX.

London, March 24. More than 2,000 women are now working as conductors on London omnibuses. Some of these have already been promoted to postitions as training instructresses, time-keepers and depot cashiers. Five hundred are employed in garages as washers and 'cleaners. You can do it In your own back yard! You can raise poultry there and sell both ejrzs and poultry at a substantial profit.

There are greater money-making: possibilities in poultry and esres than you realize. And these the young lambs. A little warm milk should also be. given to supply internal heat When the lamb is warm and revived, it can be put back with Its mother, and the chances are it will not need any further attention. The ewe should be allowed to remain in her small pen until the lambs are strong enough to follow her about.

By the time the lambs. are ten days or. two weeks old they begin craving TD IT YILLA HAS 4,700 MEJf. Paso, March 24. Francisco Villa has 4,500 men in the field with him, according to an official report made hf General Francisco "Muguia, commander Of the northern military zone.

This report was brought here today Standard IneuMlon 'profits are made surer the work of getting them is.made easier if you start right If you are equipped with Mid in Toot Eisra. Atao otberCTphen-Bailt Ioco-bfttat in atylcs and Btfeea solid food and will be found nibbling ttiVPfiMKHiieSirc S12 The car that has attained w-premacy year after year. Stdtjk models at the show ARE YO GlJEffop Tht are tb "Standard Hatcher and Poriablo bits of, Hay, and then grain should be provided for them. This can be easily arranged by making a slat hurdle or panel with the slats five or six inches apart. The size of such a pen will depend entirely upon the number ot lambs, but should be large enough to accommodate them, comfortably.

Within this enclosure a shallow trough Should be provided, in which there should always bo found a little cora chop, bran and oil-meaL Brooders of thm WorW." They 4i 2 over reapoMible tor more rsl poultry utcss haa ail other batcher and brooders combined. The entire Cypher LioeUaaaraoteed to cvo aatisfactloo or your mosey back. AMERICA SOLID AS ROCK. There's Xo Possibility of i Says A PARMEfV carrying an express from A fejj mtSlorder hovzs was accosted by local dealer. -Whs iHm't tha lO tf asw tsmli Mselfwf Ihm extra, mnd lutda mm weald haM Us kam uMch pey tha tax end Bp thi loosliis." Panic Jiow.

Chicago, March 24. Thomas W. La MULL IP and let us show vou. Sec our window Come in displaj. 2M farm totaled mi th leaf manual mod den iofilr Whm don't mm pattttdx 1 iamm fectar I mad 0 mont, member of the firm of J.

P. Mor-; gan in an address last night htr- fore Investment bankers of the mid-j dte west on "America Financially Prepared reviewed financial condi-j tions In this country since the out- break of the European war and show-' ed how the financial 'centers of the JJnited States 'hi! cooperated In tho placing, of foreign, loans for the pur-1 pose of maintaining and upholding America's export trade. Agent R. MOSES MERCANTIL COMPANY.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About Great Bend Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
122,562
Years Available:
1904-1976