GMA
B UICK
RAISE FEED FOR UVE STOCK
Second tn Imaprtsnce Only to That
of Producing Food Necessary
for Use by Family,
The production of enough fem! for
Its family live stock, work stock, and
commercial five stock is second In
importance "only to producing food for
the family, In th« opinion of the Unit-
«Hl States department of agriculture.
Farm management studies In the
southern states Indicate that the most
profitable fhrnis uot only produce the
necessary farm feeds but have a sur
plus of them to sell, and that the live
stock Is usually of totter quality an«l
better grade on the farms producing
a surplus Hum on farms where staple
feeds are bought. These tacts are
brought out In a series of 10 t«- ts
formulated by the department of agri
culture to «how whether or not a
farm 1« being efficiently managed.
The average (arm family, made up I
of five adult |M-rsons or their equlva
lent, require« for Ire proper mnlnte
name 2 cows, SO fowls for furnish
Ing eggs and |H>ultgy m«*ut. ami I
pig for each islult i < rson or his «>qulv
alent.
Enough calves should b,
raised to replace each cow reaehin.
the age of S years. This family llv«
stock. It 1.« calculated, will require
1 ton of corn and cob meal. > -H
pound* •«.' cottonseed meal, 55 bush«-!-
of
40 bushels of oats, 4.-’”"
pounds of cowpea lui.v, 2,100 pounds
of ««it hay.
4^!00 pounds of corn
iottgha.;«-. green forage from 2 acre-
and 5 acres of pasture or their
«-qulvalent. A fair provision to a load
for work stock Is 00 bushels of corn
40 bn«! e!«
nml 3 tons of
AUTO TOFS
HepbH-s Ibe »bobby rep
fimh».
ei«-v-io-b.i»>«Be
NITIKIHV. XOVEMIIKII 20, IU-JO.
DAILY (OBH1KH
O be bought by buaine&i men for busines» use
is as good a recommendation as a car can have.
The affairs of executives, engineers, salesmen,
contractors are vitally important. They relv upon
Buick because of its capacity for swift, depend
able transportation.
T
Among the Nineteen Twenty One Models, the
Five Passenger Op;n Car, combining Buick power
with beauty and riding comfort, makes it an ideal
choice for the family, too, for the hours of rest
and recreation.
\n authorized nation-wide Buick service doubly
insures Buick dependability
Prices «rf the New Nineteen Twenty One
Buick Serie.
Mewl Twor OeeFxo rss>. <1
will
we«(B»er-
iweef •*« •- V.
Smart lm*k!
»erri« coble reps—
partee« i*w«w «»ml improving th»
'« ledi»-—a «>* «Stese in a-u-
- .-vit cohtrs.
OTR PRICK, lAJWEbT
G. B. BERRY
BEAT BABE TO DEATH
MiT lb DO YOlTt BAKING
fog TTiArg&zn ing. Surely you will
have enough else fo do
without
bothffTng to bake brtad. cake or pie.
We^l takb that - harden off
your
shofelftefs and when you taste the
pred icts of our ofba you’ll never
tare to return to home baking again.
Led us Know what you require for
the big feast day. Special
large
puifijiirtft frr mince pies baked to or«
der.
Ask your Grocer for Bread
baked By the
•
I
Farmer Pcundea Housekeeper's Child
•
With Harness Tug.
A beating with a harness tug in the
hands of Josiah Botkins, a farmer, 50
years old. of near Defiance, O., caused
the death of Arthur, three-year-old sun
of Mrs. Ida May Bulio-k, housekeeper
tor Botkins.,
Botkins, according to the police, said
that he did not realize how hard he
waa beating the boy. Leaving the un
conscious child in the care of Its
mother, he drove awuy with ____
Peter
Klntner, a neighbor, where he was ar
rested.
Earl, seven years old, Jesse, live,
brothers of Arthur, the dead child,
declared to the police that Botkins
always held their heads under water
when 6e begt them so they could
<ould not
cry.
"He beats us with our heads In th««
water always," Earl said. "I have not
been beaten for a long time, but the
__
last time he made this,”. Indicating a
large scar on his forebead madg by a
strap. The back o( little Jesse also
sliows marks of violent beatings.
WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARI
Hogs on Pasture bjing Maas Ready
for Market.
roughage. ’ The arrangement of «»reps
and pasture« to uuet those require
ments are suggest«»! in United State«
«Igpartment of agrh-ulture circular
No. S3, 'Testing Farms 1n the South
for Efficiency in Management."
CZECH WITH A SCOTCH NAME
--------- S~
Editor of New Ycrk Hide Lldu Us-
sceiided From Rob Roy's
Clsnsmen.
If Harry I jii : ler wore to rend Hint s
MacGregor was one of the 1« a«b-rs of
Oecho-Slovakfnn thought In America
he would doubtle-s conclude Hint the
printer man bad ple<! the type, «lust the
same It’s a fact that the patronymic >«f
B. C. Gregr. editor of ihe New York
Bohemian daily. Hlas Lldu. Is nothing
less than a Czecho-Ulorvuk remnant of
MacGregor.
And the answer Is that one of the
editor's liveliest ancestors,was an ad
venturous Scot of the groat Rob Itoy'a
«flan who found his wuy te Bolusnla
and stay«l there.
Th«- real Bohemia of New York,
quire unknown to fl»1 pallhl Bohemi
ans who criticize life from the eleva
tion of a Gre«»nw!cb village table d'hote.
Iles In the Seventies. betw«-«-n Second
avenue and the East river. Sin«.- the
war Its Inhabitants «tall them-elves
Czecho-Slovakians.
Editor Gregr. whose forefathers for
got to hand him down a Scotch a «■«••nt.
an«l who wouldn't know how to «ay
"Hoot, mon!” either In S<ot«b or
Czechv-Slovak, Is a son of a renow r.ed
Bohemian patriot whp served for V»
years’as a parliamentary r^pre-inta-
five of his people In the legists' ;
of
their
Austro Hungarian oppre or«
The editor himself Is if profound «iu
dent of International affair* nt
1«
looked upon as a sage by the 7oo.'ioo
Czeeho-Sloviiklans in America. New
York Sun.
Alas, So Can Wei
“ll've you seen tint mnrvelous
mental calculator work?”
“Huh! I can do some «turn« along
that line m>»elf.”
"You can? tVhaf. for example?"
“1 can f«”’
h0,v mn«-h money
1
FRUITDALE
I will hate tett from tsy salary at the
en«l d next month.”
Mr«. Riggs, of Roseburg, and
“Oh, It wouldn’t be possible to cal
Ixihr, of Grants Pass, called on
culate every cent of your expenses thnt
far ahead."
Roper Friday afternoon
“Don’t need to to tell just how much
J. H. Harris and Mrs. Robert Har-
rts were dinner guests at the Stan I’ll have loft."
_____
9
brough home Friday.
Drunken Hogs Revealed Still Site,
Mrs. Nielson shipped a trio
of
A drove of drunken hogs le«l two
guinea fowls by way of steamer, to prohibition officers, on n
still hunt
San Juan, to Mrs. D. G. C. McNeil, through tt,<- headwater« of the Cum
wife of the British consul at Colina. berbutd river In Kent'
to the site
Mexlo. Mrs. McNeil is a fancier of of a b
■ !: ' lera «tifi, hidden In
fowls and ha«l had difficulty in se dark rav’« - imr the ni :nta / jd .
curing guieneas.
Mr. and Mrs. Hamilton and Miss
Not Like a Lawyer.
Allen t called on Mr. and Mrs. D tou -
Mlrandy. of dusky hue. made a poor
lette Monday evAn!«^. They found witness. In answer to every question
Mrs
Dronlette. slowly Improving put to h«-r by the attorney she In-
from her long shikness.
variably replied, “I think so.” The
A. Bauer retufted from
Brook- vtt«. uey finally b<eamt- dlsjustrel.
"Now look here,” lie warned. "I
Ings Friday
1
to spen/ the winter at
want you to out «wit thnt thinking BILLIARD OWNERS ORGANIZE
home.
Orel answer questions. Now folk ?"
Florenze Brletniayer went to Ash
“Yes
snh.”
quavered
Mlrandy. Purpose to Govern Management of Bit
land Thursday to attend the Shrlners “Rat. mlsfnh. yon m -«- It’s like dis. Ah
Hards and Pocket Billiards in
ccre-ionles.
•
ain’t like '.mi lawyers; nh enn't talk
Enlpire State.
The young people of the neighbor »Ithou» «1 Inkin'^*
Now York Millard nnd pocket Mi
hood attended the Legion dance last
llard n«nd<-my ov • «•?-■■ nr<- orrnnlvlr.r
week.
A Long Time to Walt.
n state organization to govern th«
t... ”
“Well, professor." Inquired the young
Mr. and Mrt. Lawrenc - Underwood
and J. 1». Stanbrough, wife and Ron, musician, "how de my compositions management of the pastlfnos. siml’ar
please yoT’
associ nt Pin« are In operation In Illi
George, were dinner guests of the
“Why. I think." responded the old«"' noia. -Michigan, Ohio, Missouri. Arktin
E. C. Underwoods Sunday,
In the men. "that thev may perhnp« bo played sas, Louisiana, South Dnkotn. Tenner
afternoon they all went up to the wh<-n Mozart Haydn. Mendelssohn and are and other slnd-
dam
(
Meyerbeer have boon forgotten.”
Mrs. Ella Wright spent Tuesday
“Rosily?” exclaimed the .young mtisf-
Coffee Imports.
afternoon and night with Mrs. .Cole ei.'.ti In e-«tnsy.
Nearly 1,1500,(MM),«100 pounds of oof
"i’ortnlnlv. hut not till then,” re
at the Presbyterian manse.
fee were Imported during the fiscal
Russell Wood and Walter Weckler merged the other.—Houston Post.
year ending June 30, 1020.
vie! ted the Ro per» Saturday night
and Sunday.
Entrare«! Carda—Courier office.
Calling sards at Courier office.
9
GRANTS
• —
PASS
BAKERY
»
—♦
Without Prservatloes.
According to the F1««-t Itevfcw a
man pr«went«vl himself for enlistment
who said that his mother was an
American who hu<! marrl«-d a French
man In Italy. lie sal«l further that
he was born on a ship flying Ihe Span
Ish colors while she was lying In the
English channel, that bis parents hav
ing die«! In Sweden when he was Ove.
he was adopt««! by a German who
brought hhfl up In the United Stales
The man who adopted him was not a
naturalized cltlskn.
“Would you class him ns a man
without a country?” someone asked
the n-crniring officer
“Thunder, no!" w » j the reply. “Td
class him ns n Is-ague of Nations.”—
Boston Transcript.
Not Worth Making the Change.
A widely prevailing Idea that th«-
price of books would be materially
lower If they. were Issued In papey
covers has elicited from an authority
the remark that In manufacturing
books only ten cents a copy wduld be
saved by binding them In paper In-
stt-a«! of cloth. ft might make n differ-
«»nee of, sty. 30 Cents In the retail
price of th. book, hut whether that
dlffen-m'e- la great enough to cr«-ate
much of a demand frff the paper-cov
ered volumes In preference to those
bound In cloth Is doubtful. Americans
In general have not th«- habit, which Is
common In Europe, of having their
hooks rebound to conform to thefr own
taste.—Youth's Companion.
Worked for One.
In a little settlement upstate s
her of the property owners had
talking about Incorporating nnd
Ing a totvn
So they called a
meeting for the people tn voice
opinions.
Only one man opposed It. He wild :
“Gentlemen. I am not In for making
a coriM>mtlon of this place My ran-
son 1« this: I work«.-d for one of them
corporations
once." — Indianapolis
News. '
Slight Saving.
“The upkeep of an automobiles is ex
pen Rive."
"But there Is one advantage,
the optimist.
"What Is thatr
"Tn the old dnys yon had to feed
a horse, whether you used him or not.
bnt now whim forced to economize yon
can at least keep your flivver In your
garage nnd patronize a trolley car.
Birmingham Age Herald.
Carriers Wanted—
Boys or girls with wheels wanted.
one route now open, Bonne paid for
long service. Apply Coarler office.
BUILT, BUICK W ILL BUILD THEM
i
i
Why Not
Electric
Cooking?
✓
Electric cooking provide« the one
thoroughly
|>r*cHeel, _ 'xmrrBlrn!,
clean ami sanitary nwglion f< co-th
ing.
Eliminate« dirt, tfuat,
nab«*«
gas nnd worry, (look wHbout waste.
«
California-Oregon Power Co.
AMENT’S Auto Repair and Machine Shop
DAY PHONE 118 J
NIGHT 252 R
The high grndq welding work
done by this firm, which saves
you money on your costly ma
chinery.
Wny lay
out
good
money for new parts when our
welding will save
them
years of usefulness.
WRECKING CAR DAY OR NIGHT
MACHINE WORK
for