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About Coquille herald. (Coquille, Coos County, Or.) 1905-1917 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 3, 1916)
4 THE COW ANO HE« FEED b TATE m ake r e p a ir s o f ÉL all k in d s q u i c k l y a n d e f fic ie n t ly . A ll so rts o f au t o s r e p a ir e d , n o d if f e r e n c e w h a t m o d e l o r m a k e. Y ou can a b s o lu t e ly r e ly u p o n r e p a ir s m ade in th is ga ra ge. A n d th e p r ic e s a r e a lw a y s r e a s o n a b le . W e ’ll ta k e y o u r c a r a p a rt a n d p u t EÜS Gardner & Larsen it to g e th e r again. r K E E P IN G A H E A D i You send a telegram to keep ahead o f the mails and you telephone to keep ahead of the telegraph. The telephone is the fastest communication. You speak ak your message and get your answer IMMEDIATELY. This eomnany affords long distance telephone and telegraph service lor the busv man whose time is too valuable to spend waiting for the mail. L i i C o o s a n d C u r r y T e le p h o n e C o j R oseburg-M yrtle P oin t A u to S tage Line Leave Myrtle Point 7:40 a. m. Roseburg 6. a. m. 6 hours Running Time Connecting with Coquille Auto Lines J. L. L aird M y rtle P oin t LADIES’ SHOES Suede, N ubuck Patents, and V elvets nitrogen pr phosphorous, or potash or N o :'« it Cieditors sulphur or lime t > his soil, separately or in combination and if so, in what Notice is hereby given that I, C. R. amounts and wh.<t the cost should be? Barrow, have been duly appointed A s 3. To be able to identify hog cholera signee o f the estate o f the Recorder Publishing Company o f Bandon, Oregon, by post mortem examination. 4. To know the life history and con and in pursuance o f an order o f the trol o f the many insect pests and fun Hon. G. F. Skipworth. Judge o f the Circuit Court o f the County of Coos and gus diseases that are o f economic im State of Oregon, notice is hereby given portance? to all persons having claims against 5. To start an egg circle, a coopera said Recorder Publishing Company, tive slock shipping association, a public lately dc ing _ business in the City o f □f market, a milk shipping association, | Bandon, to^present the same^with the vouchers thereof duly verified, to the etc.? undersigned, C. R. Barrow, who has 6. To stop the spread o f a contag been duly appointed assignee o f said ious disease, like foot anj mouth dis Record, r Publishing Company, for the ease, hog ctiolera or sheep scab, or benefit o f their creditors, at his office wage a campaign against jack rabbits, in the Robinson building, in the City o f Coquille, on or before the 30th day o f ground squirrels or other rodents? December, 1916. 7. To get his neighbors to standard First publication, September 26th, ize the potato crop or apple crop or 1916. ! ast publication, November 7th, some crop so that the community can 1916. C. R. BARROW, market advantageously? Assignee. 8. To protect his community against impure seed and adulterated feed? 0 . Nolice A. C. Bulletin. NOTICE is hereby given that A. E. Mereen, Contractor, has completed his Silage and Testing Contract for the gravelling of a portion Aid -oo8 Dairymen of the Cherry Creek County Road in Old Road District No. 30 and that the County Roudmaster has filed hia certifi By growing corn for silage and test cate o f completion approving the work ing their cows, Coos county dairymen done on such Contract and any person, have raised the average production o f i firm or corporation having objections about 3000 cows to 240.5 pounds o f but to file to the acceptance o f said work may do so within two weeks from the ter fat a year. date of the first publication of this No Ever since their county agricultural tice, to-w it: from the 26th day o f Sept agent. J. L. Smith, has been working ember, 1916, in the office o f the County Clerk. with the farmers o f Coos, he has con Dateil at Coquille, Coos County, Ore sidered his major problem to be that of gon, this 23rd day o f September, A. D. more profitable dairying. He has pro 1916. ROBT. R. WATSON, County Clerk. moted cow testing. The farmers have 9-26-2t The feeding o f a dairy cow should be governed by the cow ’ s capacity to pro duce milk. By keeping a daily record o f each cow ’s production the skillful feeder soon finds that some cows in the herd respond to an increased allowance o f feed and return a good profit on it, while others are limited in milk capa city and overfeeding them is unprofit able. Profitable feeding requires a thorough knowledge o f the individual cows as well as the value o f feeds. The following general rules are given in a new Farmers’ Bulletin o f the de partment, No. 743, The Feeding o f Dairy Cows, as a guide for winter feed ing by the inexperienced feeder: 1. Under most circumstances the cow should be fed all the roughage that she will eat up clean, adjusting the grain ration to the milk production. Only when the cow tends to become overfat should the quantity o f rough- age be restricted. 2. A grain mixture should be fed in the proportion o f 1 pound to each 3 pints or pounds o f milk produced daily by the cow, except in the case o f a cow producing a flow o f 40 pounds or more, when the ration can be 1 pound to each 3$ or 4 pounds o f milk. An even better rule is 1 pound o f grain each day for every pound o f butter fat quite generally responded to these e f SUMMONS produced by the cow during the week. forts and are now growing corn, erect- (he Coart of ,he S|ate of Oregon 3. Feed all the cow will respond to ing silos, and conducting cow-testing in milk production. When she begins They have not only increased the yield in and for the County of Coos but also greatly reduced the cost of to put on flesh cut down the grain. Johanne K. Jensen, 5 For the most profitable milk produc production. Plaintiff, i Suit in Equity The average cost o f feed per cow vs. .for Divorce tion the cow must be fed a balanced Jorgen L. Jensen, No. 4604 ration at the cheapest price such ration during the entire year was $32.33. The Defendant. J can be provided. By balanced ration is average profit per cow was $50 80, not To Jorgen L. Jensen, the above meant the combination o f such a pro including the value of the calf, skim named defendant. In tl name of the Slate o f Oregon, portion of nutrients and in such quanti milk and manure. The average cost of ties as the cow requires to maintain her producing butter fat was 13 cents a you ar.- hereby notified that you are requirt d to appear and answer the com bodily functions and as she can utilize pound.— O. A. C. Press Bulletin. plaint tiled against you in the above en in the production o f milk. These nu titled suit, in which Johanne K. Jensen Republican to Speak is plaintiff and you are defendant with trients are classified as protein, carbo in six weeks from the first publication hydrates, and fats. Protein is one o f Hon. A. E. Clark, prominent attor of this summons, to-wit: within six the principal constituents o f milk; fats weeks from the 12th day o f September, and carbyhydrates perform much the ney and Republican o f Portland, is 1916, the date o f the first publication ot scheduled to speak at the court house this summons, and if you fail to appeal same functions, that is, produce energy and heat, and in the balancing </f a ra tomorrow night. He will take up va or answer on or before the 31st day of October, 1916, the same being the last tion are usually classed together. If rious political issues and discuss them day o f the time prescribed in the order from a Republican standpoint. Tonight the cow is given a ration containing an o f publication, judgment f o r want thereof will he taken against you, and excess o f either element, the excess is plaintiff will apply to the court for the liable to be wasted; hence the economi relief demanded in her complaint, a cal importance of a balanced ration. succinct statement o f which is as fol Corn silage, corn stover, timothy lows: 1 st: That t h e marriage contiact hay, milet hay, prairie hay, hays from heretofore existing between plaintiff the common grasses, straws o f the va and defendant he dissolved und held for rious cereals, and cottonseed hulls may naught. all be classed as low in protein content, 2nd: That ti • plaintiff have ju dg ment against the defendant for her while legume hays, such as alfalfa, the costs and disbursements herein. clovers, cowpeas, soy beans, and oat 3rd: That the plaintiff be permitted and pea, are classed as roughage high to resume her maiden name, Johanne K. Olesen. in protein. Grain and concentrated 4th: That the court grant 3Uch other feeds are the chief sources o f protein, and further relief as shall seem meet and the mixture should be made to fit , and equitable in the premises the class in which the roughage be Service o f this summons is made by longs. publication in pursuance to an order by A few simple rules for making up the Honorable G. F. Skipworth Judge o f the Circuit Court o f the State o f a grain mixture are given briefly below: Oregon, for the Second Judicial Dis 1. Make up the mixture to fit the trict, Coos County, dated the 6th day roughage available. With roughage o f September, 1916, directing the pub- ! lication thereof in the Coquille Herald, entirely o f the low protein class the 1 a newspaper printed and published at grain should contain approximately Coquille, Coos County, Oregon, once a from 18 to 22 per cent of protein, while week for a period o f six consecutive with exclusively high protein roughage weeks, commencing on the 12 th dav of September, 1916. the grain ration need contain only about JOHN F. HALL, 13 to 16 per cent. 9 12 Tt Attorney for Plaintiff. 2. Select grains that will furnish the various constituents, especially pro Notice of Final Settlement tein, at the least cost, using home Notice is hereby given that the un grown grains if possible. dersigned have filed their final account 3. Be sure that the mixture is light in the Matter o f the Administration of and bulky. the Estate o f Elizabeth Fouts, deceas 4. The mixture should be palatable. ed, and the County Court has set W ed HON. A. E. CLARK nesday, the 11th day o f October, 1916, 6. See that the grain has the proper Mr. Clark speaks on the same subjects as the time and the county court room physiological effect upon the cow. in the County Court House in Coquille, All these suggestions should be kept in Marshfield. Coos County, Oregon, as the place for W. C. Chase, C. J. Fuhrman, Jack hearing objections to said final account in mind in order to obtain the best pos Juza and Chas. Baxter are the mem and the settlement o f said estate. sible combination o f grains. John L. Fouts and Jacob Fouts, The approximate price o f a ration bers of the committee having charge o f Executors o f the last will and Testa per pound o f protein may be ascertain the meeting and it is possible that there ment and o f the Estate o f Elizabeth ed as follows: Divide the total price will be addresses by some o f the local Fouts, deceased. 9 12-5t of the mixture by the average protein Republicans in addition to the address content as derived above. The mixture by Mr. Clark. Hon. C. R. Barrow will DIAMOMI» BRAND. A T ill? ilK DIAMOND costing the smallest price per pound of introduce the speaker and it is prob W y r « . ND. A Laolleal Auk your Drunli ...............................l.monJT*. Chl-cliM-ter’a D lt___________ protein, other things being equal, is able that the band will he out to help “ 'Ilia In R e d and H o ld metallic^ t t a l l l c W y ooxes. sealed with Blue Ribbon. the most economical. Unfortunately, attract a crowd. bbon. Take no other. Buy o f yonr v , other things are never exactly equal, !> r a r a l* t- Ask for O il |.C i n - .ft - T E R '* D I A M O N D B R A N D PILI.A, for The Home Paper for the physiological effect of the grain, years k nown as Best. Safest, Always RellatAe bulk, and palatahility must also he SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE Herein is the text for a sermon by j taken into consideration. Practically all the grain feeds low in protein are the editor o f the small town newspaper | The Celebrated rich in carbohydrates, but grains are to his advertisers and to those who should advertise, hut do it irregularly used primarily for their protein con tent, as almost invariably the carbohy or not at all. Well placed advertising drates can he produced more cheaply in I holds trade. It conserves trade and A w a rd e d G o ld M edal the form of corn silage, cornstalks, etc. j keeps it in home circulation. The bug-1 While the above-mentioned method of bear o f many merchants in the smaller P . P . I. E. San Francisco, 1915 testing the economy o f a grain ration towns is the mail order business. It is is not entirely accurate, it is usually a admitted that the system alienates The strongest and nearest w ater-proof home trade. safe method to follow. Shoes made for Loggers, Cruisers, It is in discussing this subject that Miners, Sportsmen and Workers. the remarks o f Mr. Rosenthal, adver Farming Experience Men’s Comfort Dress Shoes tising mat ager o f one o f Chicago’ s Not Always Adequate largest mail order houses, pay the non Strong Shoes for Boys advertising merchant a left handed Manufactured by The statement that " t h e farmer compliment. He says: CHICHESTER S PILLS '•usA Lyons & Jones PICTURE OF A BOY RECEIVING BAD NEWS. B ergm an n Shoe doesn’ t need anyone to teach him how to farm ” is often directed against the County Agent movement. In fact, however, the movement is not based upon a disregard for the intelligence, ability or skill o f the farmer o f today in those spheres in which he acquires experience, but just as a mother finds a time when the child’s welfare de mands the doctor’ s care, so problems present themselves for which the most successful farmer finds no solution in the storehouse o f his experience. In deed. if it were not so, farming would differ from all other activities, for in no trade, profession or occupation dots the individual depend in all cases upon hia own experience. The question may be asked, "H ow many years o f practi cal experience muat a farmer have:” 1 . To know whether protein comes cheaper in bran at $20 per ton or oil meal at $35? 2. To know whether he should apply “ We have a bureau whose duty it is to read each week the country news papers from all over t h e country. There is not a paper o f any consequence in our trade territory that our bureau does not get. This bureau looks over these papers, and when we find a town where the merchants are not advertis ing in the local paper we immediately flood that territory with our literature. It always brings results far in excess o f the same effort put forth in terri tory where the local merchants all the time use their local paper.” The n.ora. is oh' tous.- -Grand Rapids Press. H E L P Y O U R S E LF . Throw away idla hopes. Coma to thins own aid. if thou caraat at all for thyaalf. whila it is in thy powar. — Marcus Aurslius. ! MONEY-SAVING MAGAZINE OFFERS Select You Save Your Nearly Favorite H alf by Club Ordering of With Your Magazines Paper OUR PAPER Is Included with Each Combination for Annual Subscrip tion at the Price Quoted N EW , RENEWAL OR EXTENSION SUBSCRIPTIONS ACCEPTED C lu b O f f e r N o. 1 TODAY’S MAGAZINE 1 „„„ (with pattern) I ° U R PAPER WOMAN’S WORLD - FARM & HOME - - J C lu b O f f e r N o . 3 IfcCALL’S MAGAZINE T (with pattern) [ OUR PAPF.R and all three BOrS MAGAZINE - - one year $1.95 WOMAN S WORLD - J C lu b O f f e r N o. S MODERN PRISCILLA -1 TODAY’S MAGAZINE I ,.i,h pattern) WOMAN’S WORLD - J “ - C lu b O f fe r N o . 2 THE HOUSEWIFE - -1 0 U k PAPER WOMAN’S WORLD - > and all three RELIABLE POULTRY JOURNAL I ° ne T«“ U.8S C lu b O f fe r N o. 4 LADIES’ WORLD - - OUR PAPER TODAY’S MAGAZINE (with pattern) f an<^ ^ „ ^ one year $2.05 WOMAN S WORLD - J C lu b O f f e r N o . 6 METROPOLITAN MAGAZINE - 1 0 UR PAPER PEOPLE’S HOME JOURNAL - l and all three WOMAN’S WORLD - I'* ' S2.2S FREE PATTERNS. The May Manton or McCall Pattern to which each subscriber to Today's or McCall’s is entitled, may be selected within 30 days from the receipt of first copy of Today’s or McCall’s. Order by postal direct to the publisher. GU ARAN TEED TEN YEARS The extra strength o f the Rex Type writer can be seen. The type-ba-s . re o f 1-16 inch thick ness, in tc-d of the usual 1-32. The type-bar-bearing surface is, on the average, four times greater than on any other typewriters o f standard de sign. In every part there is extra folds from 5 to 20 carbon copies at one writing. The tabulator and back-spacer are operated by keys. They are in-butit — not added attachments. When the end o f the line is reached, the Rex locks automatically. strength. The Rex is a fu ll visible writer—not necessary to move any part o f the typewriter to see all you are writing and have written. Why buy a typewriter that lacks any of these features? The Rex is built to outlast all other«. Factory tests show an equivalent o f 25 years' daily service. The manufacturers consider 10 years a reasonable guarantee. Why buy a typewriter o f less strength ? Extra Capacity Letter writing is not all a typewriter should do. The carriage on the Standard Rex Model is 11 inches instead of 9. It is built for writing on wide blanks, in surance policies, deeds, abstracts, contracts, etc. Exti&ordinary Price $57.50, f. o. b. factory, would be a low price for any standard typewriter. For a typewriter o f extra strength, extra capacity, extra features, it is an extraordinary price. Why pay more and receive less? Compel those who ask more to give more. Monthly Payments Why buy a typewriter that only writes letters? For a little more the Rex can be had on monthly payments. It will pay for itself from earnings. It writes on cards, labels, tags. It prints in two colors without changing ribbon—serves as a check-protector. It is made ready for stencil-cutting v’ithout removing ribbon. It mani Ask for Demonstration Make us prove our claims o f superi ority; if we fail you lose nothing; if we succeed you save about 40%. R Ó Y M . A V E R Y , A gent Herald Office Coquille, Oregon Theodore Bergmann Shoe Manufacturing Co. 621 Thurman St Portland, Oregon Ask for the Bergmann W aterproof shoe Oil. LAWYERS Abstracts cumined. Corporation Law. Financial Agents. Trusts, Escrows and Accounts. Estates probated. Collec tions, Deeds, Mortgages. General practice in all courts. Correspondence solicited. Prompt attention. Bank reference*. FourteanA pear. LOANS PLACED ON PORTLAND PROPERTY Mosessohn & Mosessohn | F you are a business man, if yon are a pro fessional man, if you are employed at a daily wage, make up youi mind to deposit weekly a certain sum of money in the bank. Y ou’ll be surprised how the sum will grow. Cash in bank gingers up the man who has it there. He has more confidence in him self. The business man is ready for a dull season. He is ready for an opportunity. So is tli'' professional man. The man who is work ing for a daily wage and who hasn’t any money in bank frequently is fearful of a loss of his situation. He does no* work es well or with the confidence in himself as does the man with something laid aside for a rainy day. B U IL D UP YOU R BAN K ACCOUNT. 714.71S.71t C ham ber o f C o im o c c o B M f. P O R T L A N D , O ftCQON Have you paid the Printer? ^ Farmers and Merchants Bank