Image provided by: Joanne Skelton; Cottage Grove, OR
About Rural enterprise. (Halsey, Or.) 1924-1927 | View Entire Issue (May 12, 1927)
POULTRY • BUTS • COCCIDIOSIS IS CAUSING LOSSES TH E W ORLD’S GREAT EVENTS A LB ER T PAYSON T E R H U N E POOR ECONOMY TO GRIND DAIRY FEED lii by Dodd. Ua«d a Company.J V on M ult he Whitsuntide In Rothertbur • <C IR E," said Napoleon I ll's min- (F rep »r«4 bv tb s N a tio n a l u « o « r* p n i» later of war, "all la In absolute S ociety, W a a b la x to n . D. C.) G rinding soy bean and coarse alfalfa readiness for the P russian campaign, HE traveler in Germany who, at Cocel.lk.als Is a p arasitic disease hay, In an attem pt to make them bet ! down to the lust button ou tire last W hitsuntide, Is w ithin reuch of of chicks over two weeks old and la ter feed* for dairy catle. Is of doubt gaiter of the lust soldier. Rothenburg o b-d e r-T a u b e r, ful economy, Judging from tb s results Now, this w as one of the most rnonu causing unnecessarily large losses to should set aside all other plans *f Investigations carried out last year i mental lies ever uttered, poultrymen. states J. J. Black, as Napoleon III was well aw are th at and visit tills perfect medieval-walled sHtunt poultry pathologist, New J e r by the dairy departm ent of the col- lege of ugrlculture, U niversity of 1111* Europe distru sted him. lie kuew the town to witness a unkque festival, so sey agricultural exp*riiueiit station. j French were n aturally restless, th a t picturesque und so pleasantly divert The dl-euae Is picked up from con nola Comparison was made with whole ' they had had a long era of m ilitary ing as to have no equal in continental tam inated soli or front brooder houses th at have not been pro|>erly hay und with hay chaffed by mentis of glory, and th at a few years of hutn- Europe. On th is occasion the city does honor to the man who took the cleaned. The p arasite th at causes It a silo tiller About 14 p er cent of the ' drum peace might lead them to weury may I# carried ou the feet of attend whole soy bean was refused, the | of him. So he went on the principle biggest drink In all history, bur none I refuse being coarse stems, while only th at a w ar every four years would Thereby he saved the lives of Rothen- unts or on feeding vessels. 2.5 per cent of the chaffed hay and 2 keep them content, swell France's burg*» town council and obtained I occldlosls may he prevented by raising chicks In confinement, using a per cent of the ground hay were re m artial renown and m ake sufe his ovVn mercy for his fellow citizens. This Is the s to ry : concrete slab for a run In front of the fused. The gain In digestible m atter crown. During the T hirty Y ears’ w ar Roth- In the first decade o f th e N ineteenth house, udvlses Doctor Black. Only through chaffing anyl grinding was ea- uew equipment or that which has been tlm ated to be about 50 pounds a ton, century Napoleon the G reat h ad •nburg felt secure behind her great disinfected by a high degree of heat or about 5 per cent for each procesa crushed P russia to the dust and hu wall, with her tow ers well placed for should he used. When a person Is en This small gain was due to the fact miliated her king. The son of th at defense; with her wide, and at th a t tering the poultry house, he should th at the stem s w ere so much lower king w as on the Prussian throne In time very wet, m o a t; w ith her <fltl- slip on a p air of rubbers kept for that In n utritive vulue than the other por 1870 and the g reat Napoleon’s nephew zenry trained to arm s and loving noth ing better than a good fight, and w ith purpose or clean and disinfect his tions of the hay. The labor and power ruled France. Bismarck, Von Moltke and other a garrison of professional soldiers, a shoes in a box of wood shavings s a t required were about five tim es as P russian statesm en had foreseen Swedish force sent to help the Roth- urated with a pure, coal tu r disin great for grinding as for chuffing. T here was less advantage In grind trouble with F rance and were well p re en burgers against the enemy. But fectant. It has been found th at losses from ing and chaffing th e alfalfa hay than pared for It, even If they did not (as the city w as besieged by no less a coc.-ldlosls may he checked by clean In th e cnse of the soy bean hay. Only mnn.v think) secretly bring about the general than Tilly himself, who lug the hrooder ns soon as disease 5 per cent of the whole hay was left conflict. Frunce, on the other hand, brought up l<ls whole arm y of 40,000 makes Its appearance. A small amount uneaten, and chaffing and grinding was totally unready for any such and swore to capture the town und of litter should be used and the hrood resulted In GA* refusal of only 1 per clash. P ru ssia’s revenge for the slxty- dcul with It us he had alreudy dealt er cleaned every day for three days cent of the hay prepared In these yenr-old Injuries was at hand. The with hapless Magdeburg. Tilly's cannon b attered a t the walls, anil then every third day until losses ways. Here again, grinding proved a overt occasion of the Frauco-I’russlan and l/ie light artillery of the city’s stop. All visibly affected chicks must much more expensive process than w ar was as follows: Queen Isabella of Spain w as de towers was powerless to silence the he removed and the carcasses of those chaffing. The results of tho feeding trial posed. The Spanish crown w as of heavier guns of th e besiegers; but that die should he burned. It Is of great vulue to keep the floor of the showed that, In both the soy bean hay fered to Prince Leopold of Hohenzol- whenever a breach w as made and T il brooder house warm und dry. This and alfnlfa hay trials, the am ount of lern, a relative to King William of ly’s soldiers ultucked, In hund-to-hund prevents the development of the para milk produced a ton of hay fed was Prussia. Nnpoleon III nt once de fighting, they were beaten off by the practically the sam e regardless of clared th n t such selection would de Intrepid townsmen. site. Tilly w anted the city « n t capture California milk mash Is advised for w hether the hay was fbd whole, stroy the “balance of power*’ and leave feeding. It .-.insists of dry skim milk chaffed or ground. The Pennsylvania France exposed to P russian attuck on was Inevitable, nnd th at the only sul- or dry butterm ilk, 40 pounds; wheat Experim ent station has reported thnt east and south. He th erefore de vatlon of the citizens lay In su rren bran, 10 pounds; yellow corn meal, 80 digestion trials carried out with a l manded th at Leopold’s candidature be d e r; but they would none of It. At King William meekly lust one of the assailan ts’ cannon, by pounds; ground barley or rolled outs, falfa hay showed practically no effect withdrawn. of grinding upon the digestibility of itbeycd. U tterly deceived by such sub a lucky shot, exploded the R othenburg 2o pounds. Tills mash should he furnished as the hay. It Is concluded, therefore, mission, Napoleon went a step fu rth er powder magazine. Even then the soon us disease appears. Grain Is fed th at grinding of hay Is of doubtful j and demanded a pledge from William doughty burghers refused to su rren twice dally, hut Is restricted to one- economy unless labor and power are ¡ th at no P russian prince should ever der, but with duuutless courage con third the amount of mash consumed. relatively cheap and hay und other sit on the Hpanlsh throne. William tinued the hand-to-hand fighting. It This system of mash and grain feeding feeds relatively high priced. The prom ptly refused to g ran t so absurd was left to the garrison of m ercenaries Is continued *ns long as there Is any chaffing of soy bean hay having a request and publicly snubbed the to hang out the w hite flag. Indication of the disease. The grain coarse stem s proved to be a fairly am bassador who transm itted It. This Saved by a Huge Drink. was such an excuse as Napoleon had Is supplied lu the usual manner. The economical procedure. Tilly was so enraged a t the pro longed for. France nt once declared cluing.* hack to the regular ration Is w ar on Prussia (July 10, 1870) and longed resistance of the town thnt, made gradually. ' All mashes should a fter he had taken possession of It Self-Feeders Not Good rushed a body of troope to the G er contain 2 per c.-nt of cod liver oil. und allowed the surrendering Swedes man frontier. When* liquid milk Is used, all mash for Calf, Says Expert Po far, ao good. But, owing to graft to m arch out in safety, he summoned ami w ater are withheld, and grain Is Dairy calves do not have sense and Incompetency, F ran ce’s army was the members of the town council and fad spui'lnglv- a little In the morning enough to balance th eir ration for In w retched condition. Yet F rance Informed them th a t they were all to nad more ut night. It Is o ften dltll- aultnhle growth. A fter three years, went mad with p atriotic zeal. The be hanged. But, moved by the pleas cull to get the chicks to consume the South Dukotn agricultural college feats of the first Napoleon against of their wives und daughters, the con- enough liquid milk, especially If It finds th at calves given access to a Prussln were recalled. Everyone ex lueror ut length mitlgutetl this sen Is nut of good quullty. self feeder get too fut or eat such ex pected a trium phal m arch to the P ru s tence and announced tliut he would pensive feeds as to make th eir gain* sian capital. The cry "On to Berlin I’’ hang ouly four. H e gave th e council Habits of Guineas perm ission to cust lots to see who of too coatly. was on all lips. their num ber should die. The self-feeders were filled with For some reason the mother guinea In co n trast to this, P ru ssia’s troops dees not seem to realise th at her lit corn, ground oats nnd whole oats, lin were In splendid p reparation. The j W hereupon the undism ayed council tle ones are frail creatures, unable seed oil meal, bran, alfalfa und the north and south Germ an stntes (on j stood up und refused the m arshal’s to withstand extrem es of heat anil minerals aalt and bonemenl. During, many of which Napoleon III had been . “m ercy,'’ saying they would all live colil, moisture und long trampN afield. the experim ent the cu b es developed told he might r e ^ for n eutrality or or they would all die, but there would Their huhlls seem to he about ns rickets. This Is a result of Insufficient even aid) unanim ously Joined Prussia. I he no lot-casting among them at T il As sinking Internecine grievances In a ly's bidding. senseless as their noise, which prob m inerals o r poor assim ilation. ahl.v accounts In a large measure for plehty of m inerals was supplied, It common cause ; 477,OK) men were mus At this point In the proceedings, a their culture having been neglected. was assumed thnt the calves could tered, as ag ain st F rance's SlO.tani diversion w as created by the appear They make tlirlr nests In remote not assim ilate w hat they ate. The The German forces were divided Into ance of the town Pokal, the state places, under hedges, hushes, brush calves were kept In a barn rath er I thr**e arm ies, whl,ch at a signal crept beaker, a huge three-quart glass, filled heaps or wheat shocks, und if their b etter supplied with sunlight than i unchecked across th e Rhine like a with th e tow n's best wine. Tilly and nests nre disturbed they will move to the average However, the sunlight j huge three headed snake, preceded by j his seven uldes drunk und drank came through the ordinary glass. 4 cloud of Uhlans, sweeping all before again. T he Pokal w ent around tw ice another place. Valves Should he expose,) to the dl an(J Btrlklnif Bt F ran ce's very and still It w as not empty." :;o*<>-*o*o*o:;o*c>-*o-c-<>:: reet rays of the sun at least one hour | |le||r{ King William w as commander P erhaps the wine softened Tilly's dally, says Thom as Olson, who con In chief, with M arshal von Moltke, the h e a r t! At all events, he east a grim P o u ltry Ite m s ducted the experiment. pee.rless tactician, as his chief of staff ly hum orous eye over the council and The French arm ies, commanded by sw ore th a t If there w ere any man ;:o-o--o-o-o;;o-<>— o -o -o :; Napoleon 111 In person, m ade Metz am ong them who could em pty the Wood shavings make hotter poultry Registered Animals Not fam ous Pokal ut one d ra ft the coun th eir headquarters. nests than hay or straw. Always High Producers On Aagust 2, p art of Napoleon's cil w ould be spared and mercy would • • • Too many farm ers seem to he of the northern arm y drove a handful of be show n to the citizenry. The first off I he roontii In the morn T he proposal did not seem to offer Impression th at If the anim al is regia P russians out of the town of Saar Intf nnd the |>n<t to roost nt night ure brack. But th e reafter Prussln acted much of a chance to the staunch pa tered It will tiring tihotit the neces the best layer*. triots, even though the K othenhurgers sary Im provement In th eir herd. But ever on the offensive. The French. • • • Individually, fought like heroes, but were supposed to be as good drinkers This Is tlie season when mites nnd such Is not alw ays tie* case. Many a they w ere no m atch for their us fig h te rs; but at last one brave soul, lice multiply so fast thnt one of ’em purb-hred anim al Is a scrub for the stronger foes. In two arm ies France's ex-B urgouiaster George Nusch, said he reason thnt there lias been very little h<»comcs n grandm a of hundred* In Improvement In the family for several Incompetently commanded, Ill-equipped would make a try. ami Intim ated that Just a few days. If he failed he'd ju s t as soon be g en eratio n s The average fanner, forces were hurled back and pre • • • hanged drunk us sober. One of these vented from uniting, Poultry should always be fattened when he buys a hull, looks only at arm ies w as led by Bazalne, for T he keeper of the town cellar re the pedigree and thinks th at If the before killing Tbla means better iner conqueror of M exico; the other filled the beaker, and George Nusch anim al has the papers It Is Just what q ialltv . m« re weight, ami a consider lifted It—nnd d ra n k —and drank—and he wants. The |8*dlgree should be by MncMulion, afterw ard s president of ably h 'g h a r price per pound. drunk—and drank. One quart, two France. B azalne w as successively studied to note the records of the • • • q u arts and a half, th ree q u arts— beaten nt Courcelles, Mara la Tour and For fattening broilers a good ration | dam and the grand dams ns far hack G rsvelotte (A ugust 14, Iff and 18) down It w ent to the very last drop! as the fifth and sixth generations. The j la made up of seven p arts of corn I and »»» penned up In th e city of Metz And w ith the last drop Nusch fell men, by weight, three p arts wheat records of the fem ales are the first MncMahon moved forw ard to aid him senseless s t the feet of the conquer things that should Interest, then con | middling«, and one part bran. Wet ing general, while a cheer w ent up »Ider the hull. If the pedigree Is sat hut on Septem ber 1, w as surrounded with inllk until It will pour like bat at Redan, snd next day was forced to from those he had saved from the ter, and feed to the birds In shaded Isfactory, t l . i i study the hull to de surrender wltk forty generals, 4.fftk' hangm an's noose. term lne w hether or not he will do for , pens. It Is gratifying to relate th at lesser officers and 84,000 men. the herd. • • • Napoleon III, who was with MacMs Nusch came to presently und suffered Mold I" one of tlx* commonest hon’s army, w as also captured and no III effects from his draft. - troubles In sprouting oats, and Moldy Tilly was as good as his word— parked off s prisoner to s Oertnnfi Rich in Minerals feed Is dangerous fortress. At news of hts cap ture snd nearly. He »pared th e R othenburgers' Milk Is very rich In m ineral m atter . . . and rite milk producing organs of the the disgraceful faffrtbe of French arm s lives, but he made them pay him heav Follow directions nuil handle the cow nre so constituted that they can rsge nnd m ortification seised all ily In cash for his leniency, and he Incubator correctly If the best hatch produca milk ef only a certain dell France. Napoleon was deposed ; his turned the town over to tils soldiers of llvi Me chicks Is to be secured, say nite compoaltlon. T h at Is to say the ! wife nnd sen w ere compelled to flee for a week of looting and pillage. But poultry workers. intlk of a given cow, when she Is In secretly to E ngland; and. Septem ber George Nusch hud won a place In his • • • tory and lu th e h e arts of his country normal condition, alw ays contains cer I, a republic w as proclaimed. Ileus must eat plenty of mash, If On Septem ber 10, the O erntans be men th a t well deserves the annual tain definite percentages of protein they ure to lay their best. Have you sugar, fat, m ineral m atter and w ater sieged Paris. On Septem ber 28 Ba W hitsuntide party the city stages for made enough hopper room so thnt Through breeding and selection we salne su rrendered at Meta. The latter him. every hen chit gel th eir HUT There Re-snacted In the Pageant. have produced cows th at yield ssveral city, snatched from G erm any tn the should he a foot of space for every day* of C harles V, once more was held T his Is the pageant of W hitsuntide limes as much as n atu re's five or six hens. by Its origin»! m asters. P aris fell which the tourist must not nils». Each • • • after a long and gallant »tege; arm ies year some thousand or more of the sent to relieve It were beaten. France tow n's Inhabitants don the costumes Keep the chicks th at nre raised In was at P ru ssia's mercy. On March I. of 1«31 and .e-euact the whole dram a a hrooder p retty close to the heat D a iry S tjuibs 1871, th e victorious G erm ans entered of th e siege, the capture, and the during the first three ilays- ♦ O M O e O e O - e O e O h P a rts ; passing through the mighty e e e em ptying of the Pokal—with the e x Fall freshened cows give more am' Arc de Trlom phe, which had been ception that the George Nusch of to High priced seeds th at produce high erected to com m em orate the m artial day doesn't have to drink the whole yields are cheaper than low priced cheaper inllk and b u tter f a t trium phs of F ran ce; thus adding a ell- three quarts. It Is all done w ith m i seed« th a t produce low yields. Two misfits In any dairy herd art ' max to perhaps th e grimm est trony In perb accuracy of detail, with spirit, • • • the masculine cow snd th e effemlnat« 1 the annals of w arfare. gusto, and ra re histrionic pow er It taken 21 d arn for a hen egg to bull. Both are fnr too common. The provinces of Alsace and Lor- It would not be possible, of course. b a tc h , sh o u t 28 day* for (lin ks, from • • • ralne nn ' '• itinl'» o f »I ' P ’ '*". 10 give tills dram a a , It Is given, were :#• to 84 day* fur a gooae egg. and S8 Dairy stables m ust he properly ven were exacted by th e conquerors— days for turkey egg«. The tim e may tHated In w tnter or cows will not pro * fairly cheap fee for curing France nut Rothenburg Itself still very much is It *■ • lu medieval times. To he vary som ewhat according to condl dues so well nor keep healthy. • ,,f Napoleoulsui I Ilona. T t sure, the m oat has been drained, save for a pond or two, and peaceful gar den* and orchards grow w here once Its turbid w aters flowed. B ut the wall Is still there, repaired and complete, and the very tow ers where once the arquebuses fired futllely ut Tilly's men a t arms. Moreover, the townsm en of R othen burg, w ith splendid appreciation of th eir native place, have refused to let any modern Innovations creep Into the arch itectu re or the city's streets. When a house or a highw ay within the w alls needs repals, It Is done In a way to preserve Its ancient ap p ear ance. R othenburg today looks as It must have fcoked long before Colum bus discovered America. Indeed, parts of the city date from two centuries before th a t time. T his fascinating town Is the sort of place to drive an a rtist mad, since every corner, every shop, every tiny red-tiled house, Is a picture. As for the R athaus, w ith Its beautiful R enais sance doorway In the Inner court, the Jnkobsklrche, the Franciscan church, the B urgturm , the rom antic Toppler- achloaschen, and the small Gothic Kobollzeller church, built In 1472, with Its am using double spiral staircase, which two persons can ascend at once w ithout seeing each other—all of these can be, have been, and will be painted again and again, for the delight of all those who Und pleasure In medieval beauty. A ncient T orture Chambers. Below th s R athaus nre to rtu re cham bers and dungeons, w ithout which no medieval town hall would be complete. The R othenburgers did nothing by h a lv e s; so their dungeons and to rtu re cham bers are the last word In horror even now, though the rack snd the Iron Malden have been removed. Crim inals were executed here by the sword as recently us 1804, In which y ear B avaria stepped In and revoked th e city’s rights to deal out such bloody punishm ents. The civic pride of the old-time R othenburgers wus a splendid thing. They dug down Into th eir pockets and built the R athaus Just u fter a w ar tax of 80,000 guldens had been levied on the town. They built th s Jakobs- klrche, a high and hftidaom e basilica. In one of the chapels Inside this church Is the tomb of H einrich Top- pier, an even g reater hero In R othen burg than Nusch. He w as a burgo m aster of the earlier days, for he died In 1408, and to him th s town owed much of lta prosperity and many of Its fine buildings. T here are two dice carved on T oppler’s tomb, be cause he cast dice fo r th s city with the B urgruve of N urem burg and won I When the trav eler Is w eary of churches he will do well te go out Into the park und enjoy the views of the tow n’s steep red gables, while be low In th e valley may be seen Top- pler's own castle, w here lie used often to en tertain his frleld, the Em peror Wenzel. A fter a visit to the park, a walk around the city on top of the old wall Is in order. T his may he reached by staircases a t the city’s gistes. The wall has a roofed pathw ay some 4 feet wide, open ou the town side only. The Spltalhastei, th e great bastion nt the extrem e end of the town. Is an epitome of medieval defense, w ith Its 5-foot walls, wide ram parts, and frowning old guns. As a la st and pleasing tirnch, one should read the old L atin motto on the near-by Kobollzellertor, the most picturesque of all the city's g ates; "PAY INTRANTIBU8 SALUH EXEUNTIBUK'' which may he tran slated as "Peace to those who e n te r; safety to those who depart.” TWO WOMEN FOUND HELP Their Sicknea« Banished by Lydia E. Pinkham’a Vego- table Compound M rs N ina Mattfeson, Box 20«, 0 » ford. N. Y.. w rites—“If It had not been — tor y o u r medicine, I could not have done m y w ork as It should have been done. M other told m e o f L ydia H. P ln k h am ’a V e g e t a b l e Compound, and I h ad read In d i f f e r e n t papers *»• TV- ' ’ >’ I' •*1 «lone fordlfferent women, ghe w anted m e to ______________»ry It, so my hus band got m e one bottle a t first; th e n “ took tw o others. Now I am feeling quite stro n g again." Mrs. E rn e st T anguay of Adams, Mass., says she w as 111 fo r fo u r years and could not sleep n ig h ts o r go out on the street. She read about th e Vege table Compound an d decided to try It. A fter tak in g eig h t hotties she was able to do all h er work and go any w here and Is quite h erself again. T his dependable V egetable Com pound Is a household word In thousands of homes. T he fo u rth generation Is now learning th e m e rit o f L ydia £3. P ln k h am ’s V egetable Compound. F o r m ore th an h a lf a century, th is reliable m edicine has been used by women w ith very satisfactory results. If the Vegetable Compound has helped other women, why sh o u ld n 't It help you? 9 Green’s August Flower For In d ig e s tio n , Dyspepsia, etc. Relieves D istress a fte r Hurried M eals o r O vereating. Being a g entle laxative, It keeps th e d i gestive tra c t w o rk ia g n o rm a lly . *9 30c & 90c. At all Druggists. J. 6 . 6 . 6REEN, In c . WOODBURY, N. Heals Eczema in 7 Days or Less Or Your Money Back H ere Is a surgeon's w onderful p re scription now dispensed by p h arm a cists a t trifling cost, th a t will do more tow ards helping you get rid of unsightly spots and skin dlseuses th an anything you've ever used. Not only does thia g reat healing an tiseptic oil prom ote rapid and healthy healing In open sores nnd wonnds, but bolls, abcesses and ulcers th a t a re discharging nre alm ost Im m ediately relieved and cleanly healed. In s"kln diseases Its action Is little less th an m agical. T he Itching of eczema Is Instantly sto p p ed ; th e eruptions dry up and scale off In a very few days. T he sam e Is tru e of hnrtiers' Itch, sa lt rheum nnd o th er irrita tin g an d unsightly skin tro u bles. You can obtain Moone’s E m erald Oil In th e original bottle a t any mod ern drug store. It Is safe to use, and failure lu any of the ailment* noted above Is next to Impossible. Your druggist can supply you at any time. 9 Object in Holding Particle of Land W hat would you do If some friend died and bequeathed you a trllllonth of an acre of land? You couldn’t build a Rummer home, but you might s ta rt a microbe farm. Although land la not portioned out In such m inute parcels today, transactions Involving plecea of property ranging In size from a trllllonth of an aere to a square Inch were rnmanon In C ontra Costa county, Calif., 38 years ago. The trllllonth of an aero, probably the sm allest piece of described land on record, was purchased a t a ta s «ide. The Innd wns a portion of the T ar ranch at Ran Pablo. The #nr- chaser paid $24 8P, which represented tax delinquency and costs of sale. The •mall piece of land would he merely large enough to place the point of a Told Them Something fine needle on. In accepting mlnnte About Fence Building pieces In the center of large ranches, Q uite a crowd w as gnthered round the bidders secured a lien which the stove In the grocery. As Bill clouded the title, and w ere often paid Tom pkins concluded his tale of his well before a private sale could be wonderful achievem ents In fence hulld transacted.—Oakland Tribune. Ing, there came a lull In the conversa P e rry 1» " P ea d s h o t" 1» not » lo ir n » « tion. It was very evident th at all were or Or. »yrup, but a real, o ld -fa ih lo n r d m ed loln« deeply Impressed by Bill'* recital, for w hich clean » out W orm » or T ap ew orm w ith silence la to the soap box orator what » a ln »le do»«. I 7 i P ea rl 8 t„ N. t . A dv. applause is to the politician. A real financier w ants his million F inally the silence was broken by an to perform wonders w ith ; averuga old ch aracter known as "W rinkles." man wfflild Just loaf on It. “W all," said he. "th a t th a r was some fencin'—leastw ise for these days. Efficiency generally doea B ut let me tell you that If you want reed at lightning pace. to know anything about fence making, you w ant to ask some of us old fel lows. Why, back In '68, when tix* and Dick P o tter WHS wnrklDg for the rail road, th e boss sent us out one morn Ing te build a four board fence along both sides of the right-of-wav, and sir, by quitting time that night we had mad* ao much fence that It took a* Prepared Especially for Infant« three whole day* to walk back to w here we atarted from.'*—Philadelphia and Children of All Age» Ledger. 9 4 BABIES CRY FOR “ CASTORIA” Shake Hand» W ith Self When you meet a friend, why not shake hands with yourself Instead of clasping the other's hand? The Ohio H ealth New* makes the stigges tlpn. urging adoption of the Chinese method of handshaking as a hygi*-nlc measure. Many Infections are tra n s m ined through the medium of hand shaking by the A m erica, method « h ila th« Chi; cusioia ob\ late* thia danger, M other! F letcher's C a sto rl. hai '>een In uae for over 00 years as i pleasant, harm less substitute for Ca* tor OU. Puregorlc, T eething Drops an( Roothlng Syrupe. Contain* no naroot lea. Proven directions a re on eact package. Physicians everyw here reo ommend I t The genuine h e a rt signature of f