Rural enterprise. (Halsey, Or.) 1924-1927, May 26, 1927, Image 6

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    WATER,
BEARER,
J .A L L A N
AUTHOR, y
' aman
DUNN
to KI5 M A T E '
T H E D IV IN E R
S Y N O P S IS — Id ly flo h ln g H a r-
m am »« c r e e k . In C a l if o r n ia , C a le b
W a r n e r , c iv il e n g i n e e r a n d a
N e w E n g l a n d e r , la w ltiv -a g o f th e
e n d o f a c o y o tte p u lle d d o w n by
tw o w o lf h o u n d s , u r g e d o n b y a
g i r l r id e r
A d m ir in g th e b o u n d s ,
h e I n tr o d u c e « h im s e lf , a n d le a r n s
h e r n a m e Is C lin to n . W ith w e s t ­
e r n h o s p i t a l i t y s h e I n v it e s h im to
th e r a n c h to m e e t h e r f a t h e r . A t
th e C lin on h o m e W a r n e r l e a r n s
hla n e w f r i e n d ’s n a m e Is B e tty .
H e Is w e lc o m e d b y h e r f a th e r .
S o u th e r n C iv il w a r v e t e r a n a n d
o w n e r o f l i e r r n a n o s v a lle y .
He
te lls th e m s o m e t h in g o f h is a m ­
b itio n s a n d h is f e e l i n g t h a t h e Is
d e s ti n e d to be a “ W a t e r - B e a r e r . ”
In th e to w n o f G o ld e n W a r n e r
t h a r e a a i a p a r t m e n t w ith h is old
C o lu m b ia c o lle g e c h u m , T e d B a i ­
te r . c a r e f r e e a n d s o m e w h a t d i s s i ­
p a te d y o u th , o n ly c h ild o f h is
w id o w e d m o th e r , w h o c o n tr o ls
th e f a m ily f o r tu n e .
A t a c lu b
lu n c h e o n B a x t e r I n tr o d u c e s C a le b
t o W i l b u r C o * , l e n d i n g b u s in e s s
m a n a n d p r e s id e n t o f th e w a t e r
com pany
w h ic h
s u p p lie s
th e
D eed s o f G o ld e n .
H a g iv e s Cox
a n in k l i n g o f h is a m b itio n s , a n d
C ox, I m p r e s s e d , I n v it e s h im to
d in n e r t h a t n ig h t. D u r in g d in n e r
C ox a s k s C a le b to c a l l a t h is
office n e x t d a y . 11« d o e s bo a n d
C<>x a r r a n g e s a m e e tin g b e tw e e n
C a le b a id H in c k le y , t h e w a te r
c o m p a n y ’s c h ie f e n g in e e r B a x t e r
te lls C a le b he Io In d iff ic u ltie s
w ith a g ir l , M a ry M o rg a n , C o x ’s
s te n o g ra p h e r,
w ho
I n s is ts
he
m u s t m s r r y h e r. W ith H in c k le y ,
C a le b lo o k s o v e r th e w a t e r c o m ­
p a n y 's
s o u rc e o f s u p p ly , th e
C r y s t a l s p r in g s , In
lie rrn a n o s
v a lle y .
was a man. To create something, to
be a w ater bearer, to the th irsty earth
or to thirsty people."
Baxter, coming In, broke through
his reverie.
"you look like a latter-day prophet
seeing visions," said Buxter. “ W hat’s
the Idg Idea?"
"Ju st a hunch, so far, Ted. I'm go­
ing across the bay tomorrow, pros­
pecting.”
The other looked at him oddly.
"Expect to uncover a gold mine at
El Nlilo? Beware of the sirens who
lie behind the rocks! As I remember
her, th at day at the dog show, the
Clinton girl was a looker. B ew are!"
■'I'm not looking for that kind of a
mine, Ted. And I hadn’t thought of
going to El Nhlo this trip. You seem
fairly happy yourself.”
“I am. I've heard from my parties
In the land deal. They'll be out In a
few weeks. Probably some tim e next
month. Thereby greatly relieving the
general situation. Now It's up to me
to attend to the little form ality of
finding the land to please them. I
wonder If there's anything across the
TT
CHAPTER V— Continued
"Surely. Had to. Still have to. If
you ever build u dam unywhere
along the line of the (¡rent Fault,
don't forge: that. Every major qu«u>
runs along the name line, out of the
sen at a tangent, nor'weat to sou’east
down the original crack. The big
temblor In 1812 th at wrecked tin- Mis­
sions, and the quake In 1906 that
wrecked Holden and Santa Rosa,
moved over an Identlral trail. And
th at trail went clean through my big
dum down there."
The long lake had once been a peifoe-
■ ful v a lle v , Hinckley tidd Caleb, a
stngc road winding through It on the
way lo tin sea. farms, farm houses and
a hamlet with a famous roadhouse at
the Crystal Springs for which the val­
ley was named. All these had been
razed to prepare the bottom of tin-
great reservoir, fence* taken up, treea
eliminated, the plant devastated aa the
tilg dam rose In the great notch that
formed tin- main outlet to the valley.
Caleb turned the talk to the qucatlon
of Golden a Impending shortage.
"Mr. Cox,” ho *ald, "stated th at
there w a a un more w aterahed avail­
able on the peninsula.”
'T h a t Is true. We own a certain
number of artesian wella around the
l-.wer end of the liny lint they are only
a drop in the bucket. The outlook la
not very encouraging.”
"How about across the liny?" Caleb
put the query with a degree of nervous­
ness lie feared th at llluekley was
about to uncover hla own precious
theory and demolish It.
The engineer a eye* twinkled.
"They «av th at w ater, like gold. Is
where you And It. And findings keep­
ings I T here Is w ater over there th at
ethically belongs to Oakville. Our
company naturally considers Golden
more Im portant. Hut It la difficult of
development. Means large expendi­
ture. We should have a hnrd Job to
get w ater rates raised sufficiently lo
w arrant It. F iltration Is the Idg tro u ­
ble. The work would be elaborate
and expensive. We can't see our way
d e a r.''
i aleh kept hla face d e a r of every­
thing but earnest attention, llut he
was breathing more easily. Ills theory
was still virgin.
Hinckley proceeded to go Into the
present nitration system and the lay­
o u t o f the conduits that supplied the
hydrate« of Golden. Caleb's Interest
It- Crystal lakes bad been satlsfled but
be foil -wed the technical talk with
Intelligent comment and left Hie engi­
neer at Inst on term s th at were more
than merely friendly. He reached
Golden after the stores were closed
for the -lav hut. early the next morn­
ing he -htalned geodetic section map«
of the lUadranglea covering Caliente
v alle' ind the Gahllan range. He put
In m««t . f the day studying these and
making little draw ings to scale In ver­
tical plane.
It was all In support of a mere
theory but It w a s his habit to be pains­
taking even In prelim inaries, and he
surveyed his sketches with a good
deal of sntlsfaetbai.
If the theory
panned -ill It meant, not merely
money and fame If he handled his dis
,-nvery pr-q-erly, hut It would make
lilm. Caleb W arner, an actual factor
til pioneering. In elty building, lie
quote,! to him self what Betty Clinton
had suit! a t El Nhlo.
"T hat Is what I should prefer. If I
The
Long
Lake Had Once
Peaceful Valley.
Been a
buy? I must look up my notes. Want
me to come along with you. Cal? 1
wonder If the El Nldo valley Is for
sale?"
He glanced mockingly at Caleb and
laughed.
“Old Chief Wooden Face, aren't
you? D on't worry. I won’t butt In
to pouch on your preserves. Give my
regards to Miss Clinton. She may
vaguely rem em ber me. I was Ini no
d in ed to her at the Show. But, re ­
member my warning. Stoics like you,
when they fall, fall h ard!"
CHAPTER VI
T h e D iviner
Caleb caught an early ferry for the
slx-nille w ater trip across th e bay
from G.dden to Oakville. At Oakville
he took a local train th at paralleled
the shore of the lower bay for a time
before striking east through Coyote
canyon, the n atural gateway through
the hills for the overland trains. As
he had done on H erm anns creek, Caleb
noted flood signs. Then he gave him­
self up to study ing his sketches, cov­
ering the region he was going to pros
pect, going over them while the train
tngged up the canyon until he knew
them by heart.
lie left the train at the same sta ­
tion he had used on his previous trip,
buying some fruit to serve ns lunch
eon before he crossed the bridge and
started up Hermanns. He had brought
along roil and creel, more n s a mask
to hl* real Intention* than from any
hlen of fishing.
The scanty flow ran In a deop chan­
nel gouged out hy floods. He ex­
amined the aides and found them all
of gravel. A wagon road th at had fol­
lowed the creek up front the railroad
'"L’l! .*2.’!! .*—” !
turned off to wind behind a low
ridge. It was deep-rutted and Caleb
traced It. He found that it ended at
a gravel pit, dug Into the able of the
ridge, used probably for roudmuklng
purposes. The pit had been bitten
out In the shape of a horseshoe and,
standing where one of the calks would
come, he saw a dilapidated shed from FOWLS PAY WELL
the roof of which smoke was rising
FOR RIGHT CARE
through a rusty stove pipe A man
leaning against the open door, su r­
veyed him curiously.
With profits Increasing from poultry
Caleb nodded to him as he wulked It will puy to tuke good care of the
over to the shack, crunching through producing hens this summer.
the gravel. The man was lank and
“I t Is poor economy to neglect the
tall, stooped of shoulder und constrict
hens dutlug the rush of summer
ed of chest. A hooked nose stuck out
work.” says A. O. Oliver, poultry ex­
boldly from the peaked und sunken
tension specialist for the North Caro­
face between eyes th at glittered
lina State college. "W hen the hens
strangely. Long hwlr fell below his
are neglected profits are reduced.
sh irt collar.
Less grain Is needed under range con­
As he rested against the door Jamb
fit of coughing attacked him and he ditions but plenty of musty should be
shisik with It like a reed In the wind. supplied In the hoppers. U nder aver­
He was so helpless In the grip of the age farm conditions w here the hens
attack th at Caleb hurried to support have free range and production Is de­
creasing. less pf the scratch grain and
him, thinking him about to fall.
But the violent efforts ceased and more of the mush should be fed. This
the man rallied, sndllng wanly, with will force the birds to e a t more mash
a grimy handkerchief set to his lips. and thereby stim ulate egg production.
Caleb caught sight of telltale flecks Mash consumption m ust be encour­
of bright-red blood quickly folded Into aged to get high egg production. The
the rag. The cough was from the mash Is composed of whole grains
finely ground and Is more easily di­
lungs, the man tubercular.
“ '8 all right, stranger,” said the gested.”
M r. Oliver suggests th a t the hens
man. "I've bln a sight worse. Fm
gettln’ It baked out of me here. Lungs be given equal parts of cracked corn,
teched hut they’re heulln’. Flshln', wheat and oats by weight as a scratch
are ye? B etter work up to the canyon grain. If w heat is not available, one-
yonder. No use w astin' yore time third corn and tw o-thlrds oats should
down here. Folly the road below the be fed. F or the average farm flock
pit an' then trull the crick. It's tough a mash made of equul part* of w heat
goln’. Slle's chokin’, what little they bran, w heat middlings, corn meal,
Is of It."
ground oats and fish meal Is good and
".Mostly gravel undernenth, to Judge this should be kept befora the hena.
by the pit," Caleb answered. “T hanks In a dry pluce, a t all times.
for the tip. Have a cigar?"
Feeding Is one of the most Im­
The man took It wolflshly and bit portant factors In securing eggs from
off the end.
the farm (lock during summer. The
Caleb gave him a match.
hens may be kept laying and molting
"I thought th at perhaps you owned delayed by either Increasing the
the gravel pit.”
amount of mush fed or by Increasing
"Me. I don’t own nothin’. 'Cept the protein w ithout Increasing the
this cough, and I’m willin’ to get shet amount of mash. If a flock of birds
of that. Mine's a charity Job. It's cun be selected which does not stop
good gravel an’ the hill makes It handy laying until October or November, the
to git nt. I can’t work at my trad e
chicks from these eggs will have a
no longer. It takes It out of me, you
murked effect on the egg production of
see."
next season’s flock, states Mr. Oliver.
Caleb didn’t see. The g litter In the
Early molters, on the other hand, will
man's eyes was not so much th at of
produce early molting chicks which
fever ns of the spirit, he decided. H e
work short hours and eat as much as
fancied him a little demented, by way
the heavy producers.
of being a crank or a fanatic.
“I'm glad the land's worth some­
thing,” he said. “It doesn't look like
It." The man shot over a quick, burn­
ing look.
"T h at’s to them ns looks only on
the surface," he said.
“W hat do you mean?"
The man led the way Into the shack.
From the two-by-fours thnt supported
th e corrugated Iron roof hung some
switches of freshly cut willow and
hazel. Some were old and dried. And
all were forked.
"Know w hat those are?" asked the
man.
"Them 's divinin' rod* I’m a
diviner. A W ater-Finder. T h at’s my
trade. I t’s the power within me that
goes out an ’ leaves me weak. Too
weak to work at It. Each Job means
another nail In the lid of my coffin.
Mebbe you’re one of them that laugh
at It?" he dem anded fiercely. "But
th ere’s many In the upper valley ns
has blessed me when I showed ’em
w here to bore.”
The thing seemed uncanny. Yet.
somehow, It fitted In. The hunch
stirred In his brain. To Caleb, under
the spell of his vision. It seemed pre­
destined th at he, the W ater-Bearer,
should meal this W ater-Finder to con
firm his hope, a living signpost thnt
he was on the track.
He knew thnt w ithin the year the
French Academy of Sciences had ac­
cepted the dem onstration of a nuin
her of selentlfiealljA controlled cases
where the "w ater-divining rod” had
proved beyond a doubt that certain
persons were gifted with the power to
discover subterranean springs and
reservoirs. Scientists did not attem pt
to explain the mystery, hut accepted
,h e phenomenon and were making it
the subject of expert research to dis-
cover the n atnral causes.
"I have known many cases hack In
the E ast, w here I come from,’’ Caleb
said, “where w ater has been found
hy the use of the rod.”
The man was Instantly mollified.
“Ah,” he said. "It’s all true. I
ain 't quite human, mebbe. I t’s a gift,
the power. Like a medium's. Super
natural. The spirits talk to me about
It sometimes. I'd like to show ye. bnt
I’m too weak. But you can take my
word for It—me, D avid Evans, the
Welsh W ater Finder, w h st’s discovered
n score of wells north of Coyote crick ;
th at there's w ater nil under here—
under this gravel.
Apparently tbi« David Evans
I* to play an Im portant part in
the story. W hat does he do?
iNTINl’KP )
.*
« • • S • • •« a « h A
W *■ A« • »■
» w • S e
* •» • » »
a
M an Ever W a g in g F igh t on D isea se
Happy legends to the contrary,
there seems no reason to believe th at
the world ever has known a golden
age of health. Geologists find diseased
hones which are thought to show th at
even great prehistoric Ilsanls. and
after them the early mammals, suf
fered fro :. tum ors which, according
lo the advertiser*, will claim the
teeth of four out of five of ua. Man
| probably falls heir to troubles which
other flesh suffered before him.
By herding In crowds, by giving up
his dower rights of sunlight and
space, he even ha* added to tunny of
those trouble*, has created wholly new
i ways of w racking body and mind For
' a tim e the balance of life and death
[prom ised doom to cities: they sur-
vlved only because life was produced
, abundantly and cheaply w ithout their
walls, and the best and most adven­
turous were fed luto them. The slow
process of observation and control
i which has made It safer now to live
In a big city than In a village (and
often safer to live In a city than tn
the open country Itself), Is the science
of public h e a lth —Survey Graphic.
Of alt European countries, Ireland
, accom modates the fewest Jew *
OZJ M ed ica l School
F irst medlcul school In A m erica was
established at l ’erkasle. Pa., on May
3, 176£. In 1779 the rights and prop­
erty of the school w ere tran sferred to
the U niversity of Pennsylvania by the
sta te legislature.
FAT NEEDED FOR
QUALITY BUTTER
Two things ham pering profits to
cream eries and cream patrons are the
low grade of b u tterfa t sent to the
cream eries and small am ount per
patron.
‘•These two things prevent the
cream eries from paying about five
cents per pound more than they do
pay for b u tterfa t,” says \V. L. Cleven­
ger. specialist In dairy m anufacturing
at the N orth Carolina S tate college.
¡•There a re a large num ber of patrons
who sell less than 200 pounds of but­
terfat annually. It costs Just as much
to collect, weigh, test and otherw ise
handle a sm all quantity of cream as it
does to handle a lurger am o u n t It Is
a general rule th a t the sm aller the
am ount of cream produced on a farm
each day, the poorer the quality, be­
cause of the longer period between de­
liveries and the less cure and atte n ­
tion given the cream while it Is on
the farm .”
Those cream eries which are now
making the best grade of butter, m an­
ufacturing it at the lowest cost per
pound and selling the product for
the highest m arket price, are the ones
which get nil average of 1,000 pounds
of fat per farm , states Mr. Clevenger.
This means thnt the product from five
cows, each producing ns much ns 2<X)
pounds of fat per year, is being sold.
U nder such conditions, the cream-
erles can operate most profitably and
the patrons also get u profit from
their dairying. The average return is
about five to ten dollurs per cow per
month.
Mr. Clevenger sta te s th n t the
cream eries of North C arolina are pro­
ducing an excellent product, but It
could be made still better. T here are
some fa n n e rs who are m aking money
by shipping cream , but more are
needed. T here a re too many farm ers
supplying cream who keep only one
or tw o cows. If the unprofitable cows
were weeded out and the whole m at­
ter put on a business basis, cream
production would soon become a
source of real w ealth In th e state.
Incubator Eggs Used as
Feed for Young Chicks Replace Whole Milk in
Infertile Incubator eggs may not be
Manufactured Products
a total loss when taken from the m a­
chine, according to tests of the Ohio
agricultural experim ent station. In
fact they muke a valuuble addition to
the ration for young chicks, m arket
broilers and laying hens, it Is found.
Before feeding Infertile, dead-germ,
and dead-ln-shell eggs from the hatch­
eries, the eggs should be boiled 30 to
45 minutes and passed through a food
chopper or suusuge mill. The ground
product Is theu mixed w ith about an
equal weight of dry mash to absorb
moisture. The m ixture Is fed dally to
chicks a fter the first week In open
troughs In am ounts th a t will be
cleaned up In 30 minutes.
F o t crate-feeding broilers for m ar­
ket, the poultry men mix 43 p er cent
of the cooked egg product to the dry
feed m ixture and add sufficient milk or
w ater to make a feed h a tte r Just thin
enough to be poured Into the feed
trough.
Poultry Notes
Crowding or
weak chicks.
overheating
causes
Guinea chicks a re ravenous little
creatures and fo r the first week they
eat Incessantly.
W hat have you In the w ay of meat
on the farm thnt will bring 40 to 30
cents per pound? E arly broilers will
do IL
* • •
B ecause of th eir Insectivorous n a ­
ture, guineas require a large propor­
tion of anim al food, also green food,
and they m ust have plenty of w ater
to drink.
* * •
T rnpnestlng Is the only accurate
method . f determ ining the exact egg
production of th e hen. It Is economi­
cal only for poultrym en doing careful,
accurate pedigree work.
• • •
Many an autom obile Is being bought
on the farm nnd paid for with the
profit* from th e farm flock.
• • •
j n feeding poultry the henvy grain
feed should come nt the evening meal.
The birds should have nil the grain
they will clean up at this time.
• • •
Sometimes a flock Is slow about
laying, even when everything seems
right for eggs, i f yours Is lazylng
around th a t way, try a wet mash once
dally for a week or two. It often does
the work.
• • •
A chicken Incubator never feels
w orried when It hatches duck eggs
and Its offspring go In swimming.
• • *
To hatch a desirable chick, hatch
Ing eggs should weigh betw een 24 and
26 ounces per dozen, nnd should be
uniform In shape, size and color.
• • *
Beware of June hatched chicks
They never pay for th eir feed, and
are more liable to gaps and cholera.
Pen the se tte rs np In the shade with
food w ater, and a vigorous young
cockerel.
Milk pow der and condensed milk are
replacing whole milk and evaporated
ndlk In the m anufacture of confection­
ery, Ice cream and bakery products,
the bureau of agricultural economics
of the U nited S tates D epartm ent of
A griculture hns announced. T he rea­
son fo r th e sh ift Is th a t the concen­
trated products are easier to tra n s­
port and store.
F igures collected by the bureau
show th a t 06 m anufacturers of milk
chocolate used 171,542,708 pounds of
whole milk last year as against 228,-
821,543 pounds used by 61 m anufac­
tu rers in 1925. The quantity of
evaporated milk used to m anufacture
milk chocolate last year was 2,912,639
pounds against 3,037,669 pounds in
1925, and of skim milk 26,689 pounds
against 6,168,287 pounds.
Consumption of milk powders, on
the other hand, shows an Increase.
The 65 m anufacturers used 6,652,127
pounds of whole milk powder last
year, as against 4,396,231 pounds used
by 61 firms In 1925; of condensed milk
there w as used 5,499.093 pounds
against 4,369,769 pounds, and skim
milk powder 3.270,577 pounds against
1,437,810 pounds.
The consum ption of all products re­
duced to the common equivalent of
whole milk used in the m anufacture
of milk chocolate last year shows a
decrease of about 10 per cent under
1925.
Keep Calves Hungry
It Is best to keep young calves Just
a little hungry rath er than to over­
feed them. T his applies while they are
under four m onths of nge. Legume
hay such as red clover, alfalfa, or
mixed hay with more than 50 per cent
clover are all good. Quality Is im­
po rtan t In hay for calves. A calf one
month old should get 10 to 12 pounds
of skim milk. This amount should j
gradually be increased until calves j
four months old are getting 16 to 18 '
pounds dully.
Im m ense M ason ry W o rk
The greut wall of China euslly la
the greutest musonry stru c tu re In the
world. It Is said to contain more
bricks und stone than there a re In all
the buildings In Greut B ritain.
T h at Y o u th fu l Touch
O f course the m odern woman
dresses to look young. T here Is no
“old” and "young” In clothes today.
The sam e silhouette Is used fo r grand­
m others and debutantes. Txfo genera­
tions ago, the woman of forty wus
frankly middle-aged. She w ore blacks
und browns, and upon the appearance
of h er first gray h air she discarded
hats fo r bonnets, which definitely
classed her as an elderly lady. Today
the woman of forty Is a very youthful
person—and she looks It I—American
Magazine.
For an E m ergen cy
T ake a piece of cardboard and copy
on It the telephone num ber of the fire
departm ent, fam ily physlclnn, your
husband's office or o th er num bers thnt
you might find necessary to use In an
emergency.
Bo often In an em er­
gency, such a.» sudden Illness, a neigh­
bor or some one else to whom the num­
bers a re not fam lllur muy do the tele­
phoning. H ang this atfbve your tele­
phone and see w hat u convenience It
la.
R om an A p p e lla tio n
L eptls Magna Is the old Roman
nam e of the m odern Lehdo, In Trt-
polltanla, an Itultnn possession on the
M editerranean coast of A frica. It w as
so called to distinguish It from a
sm aller Sem itic settlem ent n ear the
C arthaginian fro n tier—L eptls P arva.
Leptls M agna w as th e chief city of
the ancient T rlpolltls, the other two
being Ceea (th e present T ripoli) and
S ab rata (the modern Zuagha).
P rim itive Fountain Pen
Egypt claims the first Inventor of a
fountain pen. In n 4,000-yeor-old tomb
there wus recently found a section of
reed no thicker than an ordinary lead
pencil and of about the length of a
fountain pen und m ounted on u piece
of copper. The nib of the pen is cut
on the lines of a quill pen. The hollow
In the reed Is supposed to have held
the Ink.
O ld London M onum ent
A m onum ent n t. London w as erect-
er to com m em orate the g reat fire of
1066. It was designed hy Sir C hris­
topher W ren, the fam ous architect,
whose pinsterplece Is St. P aul's cathe­
dral and whose otlw r beautiful but
sm aller churches a re to be found In
tunny parts of older London. T he
monument stands near the north end
of London bridge.
Secret G overning B oard
Cabal means a secret cabinet or gov­
erning clique whose m easures are un­
popular. Such a clique existed in th e
relqp of C harles II of England, com­
posed of a lfford, Ashley, Buckingham .
Arlington and Luuderdale. The In­
itial letters of their names form the
word Cabal.
Population G row s Fa*t
The population of the United S tates
Increases at a rate of one person
about every tw enty seconds.
A twater
K ent
ignition
for Fords
TYPE LA
Price
$1Q 8O
Includ in g
Cable and
Fining*
O ats and w heat are commonly . rh e name assures its performance
grown for succotash for feeding dairy
twenty-«even y e a n - A t e s t e r K ent "ha«
cowa.
•tood for advanced electrical engineerin*
• • •
and absolute preciUon of m anufacture, Tk—
qualities, which have won I c e d m h lp in R adio,
Feeding hoarder cows Is worse than
explain the«cn«atlonal perform ance of A tw ater
throwing away money, for It Is also
K e n t Ig n itio n fo r F o rd « . T h ie r e m s r k a b le
•dentlfic ignition «yitem will literally m ake a
throwing away labor.
new
car of your F ord ~ sm oother, snappier
• • •
Pow », easier «tarring. am azing hul climbing.
Care must be exercised to prevent |
Installed In a n hour. The low price o f »10.S0
farm cream from freezing prior to ! Inciudee cable end fitting». O ct facta from
delivery to the creamery.
your service station or w rite to
• • •
A T W AT E R K E N T M FO, C O M PA N Y
“A pnre-hrefi sire makes milk checks
A. Atwater Kent. Free.
higher." llow about this for a pure­
4S1S Wleeahickon Ave.
Philadelphia. Pe.
bred sire campaign slogan?
• • •
M a k e r * of
Keeping feed record* nnd weighing
and testing milk regularly make it
possible to determine the production
of your cows with a high decree of
accuracy.
• • •
In raising the dairy catf, leave the
calf with the c o w for one or two
day* and then take It away and feed
from eight to ten pounds of warm
milk per day for about two weeks.
A twater
K ent
radio