Image provided by: Josephine Community Library Foundation; Grants Pass, OR
About Grants Pass daily courier. (Grants Pass, Or.) 1919-1931 | View Entire Issue (March 21, 1923)
GRANTS PASS RUTA' COVRI FH such that at ad time« in the day, some part of tlie pen will receive tue auu's rays. The building shown la 24 feet t. .de and 40 feet long. Through the center run* tb> feed alley and driveway. Along one aldo, the south side of the building, *n- eight fttrrowlng pen*. On the other side are six pen», with ■ sized teed rooui in tlie corner. Iowa Type of Building Admits good Each pen has a concrete feed trough, Plenty cf Sunshine. which makes It a convenient matter to run the feed cart along the alley and distribute the feed, A portion of each PROVES GOOD INVESTMENT pen Is covered by a plank floor, on which the bolding Is placed. Till* floor is slightly raised from the con C2r* In Feeding Sows Before Farrow crete permitting a circulation of air between the planks and the concrete. ing and a Comfortable, Safe Hom* This method 1* lists! to keep the young for th* Little Pig* Means pigs off the cold, damp floor, and pro Added Profit*. vide a dry place for the bedding. Pig guard* «re along the side »here the By WILLIAM A. RADFORD plank floor Is placed, to enable the William A. Radford will answer young pig« to escape their bulky moth questions and give advlcs FREE OF COST on all subjects i-ortalning to th« er when she live down to feed them. Connected with the house on either subjai-t of building work on the farm, for tha readers of thia paper On account of side by small door« near the floor line hia wide experience aa H-bitor. Author and «re concrete feeding floor», which mean •Manufacturer, he la. without if >ubt. tha highest authority on all these subjects Ad a saving of feed and more healthy sows dress all Inquiries to William A. Radford. and pigs. Many hog raiser* use re- No. 1S7 Prairie avenue. Chicago. 111. and movable partitions between the pens, only inclose two-cent stamp for reply. so that in summer the house may be Hog raisers know that a spring pig used as a shelter and Inside feeding Extreme heat of summer rv- brought to maturity and finished for floor. the market lu the shortest possible ;ards the growth of the hogs ami some time is the most profltable. They also place where they can rest In the shade know that care in feeding of the sow* is needed. A house like this pays for Itself In a before farrow ing, ai.d providing a com fortable, safe home for the little pigs few years. It permits the owner to mean added protits. Spring pigs have have two litters of pigs a year, and advantages over fall pigs in that they Insures that a greater number of them get a good start in life before they are live and grow Into real money when turned out to pasture and come aloug marketing time comes. under the best of conditions. Hampton Court Crapes in America. To have profitable spring pigs and What are said to be the rarest another litter in the fall the sows must be bred so that they will farrow their grulle* in the world are those which litters early—in February or the first grow at Hampton court, the London part of March. These months in the palace of King George, The fruit Is corn belt states are well nigh fatal to large and black and grows In great newly born pigs unless they have the dusters. The choicest product of these right kind of quarters to get a start vines are served upon the royal tables in. That is the reasou great stress and tlx* surplus govs to the London has been laid on bog houses by the ex- hospitals. Visitors to the place are AND PIGS HEALTHY View of Reval, tsthonia. play—word* (Pnparre by th« Natloaal dresmehle So- two new ei*ty, XVaxh'i ------- * <lon. **■ D -* C.I which, like intelligensia. may be miss Lithuania, 1-atvla and Esthonla. ing from many dictionaries, but which arred from the Baltic fringe of pre- go a long way toward explaining Im war Russia and whose Independence portant tacts about the new republic. recently has been recognized by the One of these words Is "Balt.” The I nlted States, have appeared often in v.-orld comment lately and are sure to word does not refer, as might he sus be important in the years to come pected, to any indigenous resident of cither as buffers or gateways to huge the former Baltic provinces of Rus sia. Just the opposite. A Balt is a Russia to the east. Mere mention of these three new non-Lett. descendant of the Brethren -tales indicates how the Bu'tlc sen of the Sword, an aptly named i band of German merchants who settled manor has been subdivided into new national building lots. Here where along the Gulf of Riga, near the pres ibe old Russian and German empires ent Latvia capital. Riga, and started n to convert or kill the Letta. Then nad Sweden held complacent sway, an ind there the Ie*tts gave an inkling .'«sortmoot of new national neighbors of their Independent temper. They suddenly starts housekeeping—Fin land, Esthonia. Latvia. Lithuania. Po drove out the medieval missionaries, land, with Its precious corridor to the immersed themselves again In the sea. and the free city of Danzig separ waters of the Dvina where the? had ating the German republic from West been baptized at the point of German Prussia. Sweden remain*, as does Den swords, and sent the waters back to mark. whose small frontage now be Germany as evidence that they re- comes important amid such a rapid nounced the new religion. Then and later Latvia shook off waterfront development. Strangely enough giant Russia retains only a German political control but welcomed right of way—to preserve real estate economic co-operation of Germans. terminology—and emerges now from Riga became a prominent member of Petrograd through the gulf that separ the Hanseatic league In the Thirteenth century and kept an Important place ates Esthonla from Finland. Lithuania, the southernmost of the In world trade until 1914 when it three major Baltic countries carved stood second only to Petrograd among out of prewar Russia, borrowed many Baltic cities In its shipping. Through the centuries of political of the principle« of Its republican gov seesaw the German merchants In Lat ernment from the I’nlted States. Over the present country of Lithu via accomplished what Invaders could ania, once the largest state in Europe, not, achieve. They gained control of extending from the Black sea to the the land and thus of the local govern Baltic, the armies of Germany and ment* and held a position which has Russia crossed and reerossed during been compared to that of the landed the World war. Germans often raided gentry in England of a ctntury ago. the country to capture cattle and the This squirearchy of the Baltic com Russians cpunter»at'acked to gain im prises the Balts. And so enlightened mediate results for the moral effect was their tyranny that when, about the time of our Civil war, the tsar elsewhere. began to Russify the Baltic provinces, Lithuania’s Old Language. the Letts and their neighbors resisted. These fair-haired and blue-eyed peo ple. who claim that there are more They resented the replacement of their feudal barons by Russian bureaucrats. than one-inillion foreign born Ameri “Literaten” of Latvia. cans of Lithuanian extraction In our The other new word which Latvia country, speak a language which is aafd by some philologists to be the brings Is "Literaten.” It applies to oldest living language today. It re the professional men. the writers, art sembles the primitive Sanskrit and Is ists, doctors and others, a group which distinctly different from the Slavonic lies between the alien noblemen, on family, the Teutonic and the Latin. the one hand, and the native farmers The conquering nations who ruled the and laborers, on the other. The territory from time to time have at via “Literaten,“ became tlie tempted to stamp out the native «rvors of literature, art. music, tongue by requiring the children to use ideals of political Independence. Tlie present position of Lett; h textbooks and prayer-books written in the Cyrillic alphabet, but they have sic may symbolize, in some degree, Irtish national life. Invariably, visi never been entirely successful. The ancient capital of this area, tors are impressed with tlie musical which now is slightly In excess of the genius of the people. Critic* explain U_l. combined areas of Now Hampshire. that ttie Letts have passed the folk U_1 song period »nd are groping toward Vermont, MasMchusetts and Rhode IL— Island, was Vllna, »hose narrow and that stage of creative genius where Winding streets, stony pavements and great composition» may be expected horse-cars give it a quaint and almost of them. Esthcnia Is the northernmost of the medieval atmosphere. Though the «eat of government now is Kovno three countries, Its northeastern cor- tier, In fact, extends to witliln about many of the great events in Lithua ail miles of Kronstadt, the fortified nfan history center around Vllna. Vllna was founded nt tli<* lunctlon gateway to Petrograd. The Es:banians might well chi Im to of the Vllna end Vllaykn r'" iT» b> Gedltnln In 1322, and Is connected by be tlie peeis of any national sufferers railway lines with Petrograd nm! since medieval times because they through Warsaw with most of the have heett sore beset both by Germans and Russians. From tlie eiglities of capitals of Europe the last century until the World war Latvia Fought Well. Latvia, which adjoins Lithuania on period Esthonla bore tlie double yoke of tsarist laws no. tinlstered by Ger the north, stood out by its accoin man oflicials. As -;.>e writer exclaims. plishn.ents during the World war. For a tiny Baltic state, only a little “Heaven preserve us from Russian larger than West Virginia, to battle law ns interpreted by Germans. Tlie both the Bolshevists and the Prussians Russian official may not take a Rus-; out of Its borders, then to disarm the siun law very seriously, but one can ! ports at the agrfmltnral collegos, ami sometimes fortunate enough to secure Germans In Its midst by constitutional be sure that the German officluls will." i Several designs, each well suited for a bunch by a liberal tip or bringing The Estlis are nn aboriginal people' a farrowing house, have been brought some great firessure to bear, but no means Is an achievement. Even allow ing for a strategic location and for of northern Europe who once terror out and advocated for general con one before ever hud tin- temerity to “breaks" of political hick, Latvia's ized the Baltic by piracy, and Inter struction. try to get a slip of the old vines which persistence and Yankee-like Ingenuity clashed often with Swedes and Danes. Shown in the accompanying illus have been growing for more than 200 Within the past lin'f century the Rus tration is a good typo of hog house, or years. Mrs. E. If. Warr»n of Boston, compel attention. Latvia and the Letts were already sians undertook strenuous methods to barn, which was designed by the ex however, succeed'd jn accomplishing distinctive. According to Dr. Edwin gather the Esths into the fold of their j perts nt the Iowa state college. This this and recently brought two slips of A. Grosvenor'S classification of the Orthodox church. Is known as the gable roof house. It tint historic vines back to this coun races of Europe, the I.etts with the Tlie rugged endurance of tills north-; Is a frame building set on a concrete try an<l will endeavor to grow Hamp Lithuanians stand alone as a separate ern people, their vitality nnd spirit, is fonndtriion nnd having n concrete floor. ton Court grapes In the vicinity of Bos stem of the great Slav fnmllv tree suf'!,;i .i,• |-,- shown bv their bearing tip The jiens are ranged along the sides ton. Sim Intimated that sho that splits Into numerous branches under oppression that was both' re of the building. A w indow In the sl«le bribed a gardener, but she has among tin- Eastern Slav», the West ligious and polltlcui. nnd from the po wall admits light and smsbine to each fold his price. ern ¡Slavs, and the South or Jugo litical standpoint both Prussian and of the pens, while a double row of roof Russian. Perhaps their Mongolic de windows on the south exposure admit slavs. Lofty Regret. Latvia received Its credentials ns a scent helps account for that. light nnd sunshine to the pens on the The absent-minded Inventor perfect* Before the World wnr Esthonla was nation from the allied supreme cotin opposite side of the building. <‘<l a pa.ni liute devlc». lie was taken cl! almost twe years ago. It earned accounted one of the most progressive Sunshine lias two good uses Jn a up In a bnlloon to make n test of tlie regions, agriculturally, In Russia. Nn 1 this early recognition as n reward. In hog house nnd during the cold dump apparatus, Arrived nt n height of a paw. for allying itself with Poland ture Is scarcely kind to tlie Esths- months of late winter and early spring, thotiaiind feet, lie climb»'I over the ns a nntlon. They live In n low »gainst Russia, while Esthonla. to the to<> much of it cannot be admitted to edge of tin- basket, ami dropped out. north, made a friendly trei.:- wit»-the «wnmpy country, nowhere as high' the farrowing pens. In tlie first place He tad fallen 2<M> yards when lie re Soviet government, and Lithuania, to above sen level as tlie base to topi sunshine Is a germicide. It keeps the i marked to himself, In a tone of deep the south, engaged in a dispute with height of the Washington monument. * pens sanitary. In the second place it regret: Their summers are hot; their winters Poland over a boundary question. “Dear me! I've forgotten my urn* provides heat and dispels dampness. A consideration of Latvia brings cold. The arrangement of the windows is brella.” C. J. Breier Co. We Own And Operate 42 Stores The House That Undersells Them All! Thread t J. S V. Coats sewing thread, 6 cord», standard 150 yard spool most all aile* le a **plM»i or 12 spool*. IM, -, Due to our low prh«*« you muit pay the postage. President Suspen ders a pair 45c. web »»»pender» «Ac Men's extra hi-nvy web simpett- der», the kind you ordinarily buy for 11 uo now «Ih- Mens special Muslins Men’» Shoes Bleached. Very soft, no starch I Ac 36 In. wide, a yard Extra soft tor the needle a yd. HR- Extra fine quality bleachi'd jeans. 3« inches wide a yd. gite Flue quality unbleached mus lin per yard IW<--2lc s-lneh top* a pair a2Jix Goodyear welt outing shoo* for men »l.liM and BJ5.4Ü Men's cherry OOM shoes M2.2.x ■' ... , Pillow Cases Fruit of the loom, made from 4 Ac 36 Inch goods Ladles fine knit union suits »hell bodice »Ise 34 to 3k a :IA« »Ult Alte Io N.' m - Others at Yard Wide Curtain Scrim 30c values 33c values values 6Uc values 12 4c t fk- IWc I.V now por yd now per yd now per yd now per yd. l'oro» Knit, ribbed. . SI.2& value» 11.00 value» 11.65 valu*-« 11» I bring»» for. now tor. now for. now Men’s Athletic 75i, NAc. Bflc and Ol.tHl ■ Men’s $3.00 Rubber Soled Shoes We have a few at Men’s Summer Unionsuits Man's Kt If»I weight jumpers, sortii ordinarily 11 S5 now Bl.lt» l>2. IS Men’s High Grade Dress Shoes In pebbled calf. Russian calf and gun metal leathers at B'J.IM» to »TAO We save you money on these shoe» -Come and *ee them. Men’s Khaki Shirt Regulur Sûr value now <IUi Ladies’ Corsets l»M. . BI.2A, SIJMI, Sl.tlA and up Infant’s Shoes, Etc. Infant'« First Htep Shoe*, ordi narily «ella tur 11.75 to fl »5. I."A '1 II' I > »I 2A infant'« Hi Top». K eyelet*. Vici kid «nd pa leu I Icuthor, 12.75 value», now BI.B3 One lot of infant'« shoes Sl.uo Infant'» Lut i'ae«, mudo In a Goodyear writ, can be hulf- •l.M »olod. u pair Crib Blanket», »10 value» ISv Crib Blanket«, 6 Sc values tuie Crib Blanket«. • OC value* 41k- Girl*' all wool middles, age* 6 M2 4U lo 1U. only__ Low Overhead Expense C. J. Breier Co All Goods Bought Direct From Mfg. We Buy For Less The Sample Store We Sell For Less The Home Merchants Want Your Business 1 We have bought at a Very Low Price a large part of the stock of Count’s Feed Store Who Recently Closed Their Doors This Stock Will Be Put On Sale At Our Warehouses, No. 1 and No. 5 c5 Saturday, March 24th, 1923 —at— Genuine Bargain Prices It will pay you to call when in town if you are in need, of Flour or Feed || Josephine Farmers’ Co-operative Association Phone 53