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About The Coquille Valley sentinel. (Coquille, Coos County, Or.) 1921-2003 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 13, 1922)
saga m 1 - T I RIDA V JANUARY II. COQ ITILI ' « ... mm An Unparaiieieu Magazine Offerr $4.50 for $3.50 m V iv i' BEST DEVELOPMENT OF CALF i: m § AN OREGQN PRODUCT Use It and Save Money H P #äl '.rr k P 1 T 7.'-4 ■¡■PROM PTLY Delivered to All Parts • ?W ficà ie;- liiF vw a . - ’ ' ,-V P*. *:..v $9.50 per ton Beaver Hill Lump $8.50 per ton Beaver Hill Nut | Delivered in ton lots where it can be shoveled from wagon .. , ? .IWW *. K S 5 l-k O ffice open till 5:30 p. m . W ednesdays LEO J. CARY First National Bank Bldg «V a h K. sBrïuj .i.-? ' / . Fire Haras Afraid af Mice- “Why da you keep so many cats the station r a chief la a etty partm ent was caked ra “So (hat Baa can «leap soundly,“ re plied the chief. Baa la ana of the Ha la a Mg bay, kind and gaotle. One great troobla Ban baa Is ad rata and mice. The Instant a ra t pokea Its bead up through a crack In the Boar, or sca up toe near Ben, ha throw* hie m tap of a railing which stands two foot from the Boor, and thara ha stands until the moose or rat die- and the cat* work to- tha haras begins climb ing oo the railing aad making all kinds of notes, the cats have learned that thara la a mouse In Ban's corner. They com* from all parts af the sta tion. and the frightened haras ta a t peace again.—Oar Ü B H ■ u t H io n e 76J •* > FARM POULTRY EXERCISE BEST FOR POULTS IS . M ' ■ Eh 't Kc .rrqnently happen* w hin ;be pou'its are hatched lata la the senson, no ■halter la required. « a th e ; do batter In the open; bat It la advlsabto to keep them within a fenced tacloeura for the Brat three or four (lay» u n tt they are strong enough to follow the mother. W eather conditions beta« fo vorahle. the hen and brood can be glean free range ’after the third or fourth day. bat care »himjd be taken to kaep then* oat of haaey dew*, and to protect them from rtan for the Brat two or throe weak*. After this tarty Homing dawa or light ebowera tot lowed elooely by warm eunshfna wfl: la little harm, aa the poulta anon beroat warm and dry. If cold, damp w eath r aeto In. howeear, they will n ectT ^ be kept In dry quarters, for nothing I* more fatal to young poult* than wat Whan about sbt weeks old. the young turkey* am old enough to go to moot Practically all turkey ratoon allow the birds to roost In the open trac» or on fences or other roost* especially provided for them. In section# where high winds prevalí. It la customary to build the roosts next to barn s r »bed sitare there la t^me protection. Whet, this Is dene posth are driven Into the ground and poles laid across thorn four ef flve feet from the ground. By driving them to the roosting place and feeding them there every evening just before dark, young turkey* can be made to roost Wherever desired. For the flrat few femes It Is sometimes necessary to |e e p them under the roost until dark, but they will Anally fly up. and after a weak or aa will no longer have to be driven, but will come up every night to be fed and to roost. During the summer and early fall turkey* can And an abundance of feed on the average farm. Grasshoppers and other’ Insecto, weed and grass seeds, green vegetation, berries, and grain picked up In th e ’Held* all go ta stake up the turkey"« dally rabas. When this natural feed Is plentiful very little need be added until flatten ing tíme, s w ept for the Jhrpoae of The Cup T hat Cheera. The tea of commerce Is tl of a cultivated ah rub which . thrives the F ar East—to peninsula aad on aome of tba adjacent Islands, la largo parts af China, and in Japan. In only one part of the world la ton known to grow wild, and that ’la In tba forests of Assam, the northeastern province of British India adjoining Burma, noted among other things for having the heaviest rain fall af any p art of the world. In the Assam forests Indigen ous tan Is a tree of vigorous growth attaining a height a f thirty ( e a t In Aasam to grown one-third of the tan produced In India, ft la believed that tba plant was takeo from Assam to China, and It waa from China th a t tba world learned the uaa of tea. The flrat tea-house waa opened ta Loudon In 1007, and from th at time tan came a popular beverage. gç, Let the Turkey* Hava Open Range. “THE CONQUERING POW- directed hy Rax Ingram, the responsible for th e great film rpieca, “The Pour Horsemen." is new creation and he royally the poulta whenever they run to bar, which they will do If they became chilled. The greatest care should ha taken to kaep the Interior of the coop dry, and for this reason ft la advisable to choose a sandy slope where the water runs off quickly und where there Supply a t Milk or Skim Milk St Important—Quantity Oa- on Size and Ag«. h r th e U nited S ta te s D ep art- Rax Ingram of the “Pour H an s on" fame has dona ft again. Baa his <*n ha latest, “THE CONQUERING POW- * ’• * * * ” a t the Liberty n a rt Tuesday aad Ï Î / Ï Wednaaday. m sent of Agriculture.) No part of dairy farming to more es sential than the prdfeer feeding of young calves. Likewise nothing to more Important for the bast develop ment of calve* than a good supply of milk and aktni milk in the ration, la the past few yea hi tie surplus of these products has been utilised As human food In the form of condensed and powtkered milk and skim pllk. Re ports recently received by the United States Department of Agriculture, bow- ever, point to a temporary surplus of these products during the flush season, due to dgcreased export outlet. Un til this situation to adjusted, It would seem advisable to utilise tk* surplus milk and qklm milk aa feed for live stock. \ Id raising' dairy calves moat dairy man prefer th a t the calf remain with the cow for the flrst 48 hours. If It to taken away then the cow will be lea* nervous when she begins to be inflked again for commercial purposes than If thOy are allowed to run to gether for a long period. It la desirable that the calf be ta a thrifty, vigorous condition When It to taught to drink. It may ha left with out food for 12 hour», at the end af which time ft will be hungry, and with a little teaching win usually drink milk from the pall. Warm, freak milk from th e mother should be put la a dean pall and held near the floor In front of the calf, which will generally begin to noee about the pall. Oaca It gets a taste o f milk, It will esually drink without further trouble, times, however, mors vigorous a m m ail be taken. The quantity of milk fad to a calf depends upon Its stoe and a**, and to some extant on the kind and csodltloa of the feed, bat experiments by the Department af ■Agriculture Indicate that khont ana pound a day should ba fad for ovary tan pounds weight of the calf a t birth. Many beginners make the mistake of lotting the calf have aa much milk aa tt wants. This would ba all right If the calf wars fad every two o r three hours, as when ft runs with the cow. but as It Is Im practicable ordinarily to feed m< than two or three times a day, It to beat ta keep the quantity well below the rapacity of the calf and not risk overfeeding. • F ar the flrat four days milk from the dam should ba fad. A fter th is the milk may ba from aay cow or The CoquiUe Valley Sentinel, regular prite SUNSET, regatar p r i c e ........................... ..... wk $2 00 . . ’ * TOGETHER fo r m . * 32 ¡8 "The G reet H atiem al M agaunt SUNSET, M — , j* the representative m onth- latae of the West—oa- _______j ft* circulation, Western ia its point of view. Clever short storks: serials that hold your interest from one month to the next, form a part section that offers SUNSET readers intelligent opinion* on up-to-the-minute events and prea- ent-day problem ^ h e j & c r v - am a f f i ws» I II / W * s ice Bureau," a clearing he readers' inquiries;— "The Home in the West." “Western Finance," aad a boat of other feature* combine to nuke SUNSET a magazine for the home — for * of the family. ant with th*'publisher, of SUNSET has ws urge those of our readers who a r t intmoetad ti take advantage of the reduced rata th at wa Evan if your subscription has not expired—use the coupon anyway; your order will sta rt with the expiration of your pron- ant subscription. Send in the coupon NOW—th# publisher* of SU N SET have roaorvod the right to withdraw thia offer at any tllllfi. t U m T h in C o u p o n COQUILLB VALLEY SENTINEL CoquiUe, Oregon. ‘1 I accept your Special Magazine Offer. Plans* enter my subscription to your newspaper for one year and forward my name to SUNSET The Weet’a w e n t Na tional Msgaxine, to ba entered aa a subscriber for on# yonr. I enclose 18.60, which I understand aavas me 11-00 , ‘ .. - Name , , • • • » , « « . , • , , » • » » . Address , . , , ««« v-• >• ; • '•. t m M 4 -W p City e e ee ae ae ae e e s ad e e e o e e ” • '• If ; StHtfe # * a* « * a s a s s aa * # * s * V> TV V' . . B i f i l Sun*«t with ....................... ......Bomber * Note—This p o p « and SUNSET will be sent to two sep- arete addreeaee, if desired. Indicate the two address ee on a sheet of paper and attach this coupon. — When Tw# er More'Calve* Are Ralead f /f Na Front-Door Key* In F aria H ad Good Im agination. When an American gee* to Paris for Mark Twain had such a vivid Im the drat time aad reift» an ap art ment or take* a room In a hoarding agination that tt waa a rtlfflcult task boose he Inquires Innocently If ha may for him to tall a straight story Just bava a key for the front door. Than t a It happened—ha could make up on* that was so much better. It to said that Albert Bigelow Paine, working on the Mark Twain “U fa," found It nsceaaary to dlarard much of the au Ilka I t The key la nine or tan Inchee long aa a role and weigha at least a tobiographic material that Mark Twain pound. Nobody baa arar carried a had writtanv Investigation and talks front door key In Parla. It oeems, and with men attll living who knew the consequentiy nobody Bks a ra r taken tecta «Imply proved that the tales the trouble to make the locks small. were hot ao. And Mark Twain waa Both the system of having a portar or no liar. He had a glorious, an al concierge always an duty at the front most superhuman Imagination. As doer, and the lock* with which that ha approached'three-acon and tan ha ■AM. aa-quoted In the “L ite:" “Whan I waa younger I could remember any thing, whether tt happened or n ot; but I am getting old. and aeon I -i-» ' ■ «n'y the latter.“ c V Couldn't Qat Away, At the and of a two-hour barrangoe was only one person left In the «•ides tbs speaker, ao elderly otan. who was acated Close to the roe-' tmm and had bis hands claaped over the bead af a walking tu c k . "My he descended from the platform and extended hi* hand, “I want to thank Jo* for having the courtesy to hear through to the end, ak _ " 7 7 hf dy •*“ ln ‘he hall got o o t" >‘U m p h r rn>ti«d frWru,fy' paralysed ta my leg, for ten been Pt^wHed to come after me eat portrait gallery of “real" people az hour ago and he’s not hare y e t ," - aver filled by a singla author.—Chicago Journal. Ortgta.„y French. p*,n‘"*’ “ Tto gsm* ta b ileriTed irò » * f 0,4 r r *noh Proverb, “La Jeu ne on o to veut pee u chandelle.** w h i^ Originated In early timra when ^ m SL 58^.5221by •*d4,*iK th* It will not be found economical. The time that milk eboald ha dis continued depends Upon it* cost la re lation to the value of the calf, its breed, also. Vigor, ate.' The season In which It reaches the age of ala mouth*, and thh other fee^a available a t thae- Mam. must ala* he taken late consid eration. fltx months la probably a good Frito not ^«W a. and 0 1 **ritem*nt, worth ht riving la not worth"!he1" * .^ * P °? T *port that proront time the*^ n t a ï V t t o to that th# th . o m,«—. Phrase la h k5~ JT 2. - “ * t t . labor, MTmTaJ "T H E CONQUERING PO1 th e Liberty next Tuesday i CONQUERING POWER-* üül K . ■