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" I!I ..1.. Ea ? DELCO-LI( were raised D comforts and deliberately : wculd provic They were ii r.de DELC ment for aui -They knew ( limitations c They inew farm home r of order anc It must be < It must be ' It must be 1 indefinitely ED T.M Home i The D $PE[D UP FALL [GG FLOW BY WELL-PLANNED FEEDING Carefully Selected Pullets and Hens Will Produce Plenty of Egg if 'They Are Given Properly Balanc ed Rations Generously and Regu larly; Sonme Tested Mixtures. Mrs. Hien, veteran, and Miss Pullet, "rookie" of the laying flock, willi produce plenty of eggs during the fall' and winter months if they are proper ly fed andI carefully managed. Investigations of the United States Department of Agriculture show that general purpose pullets will consume ij'( Boyce Street ThE COLUMBIA SIX Touring-..._-..._....$1,85 Speedster-.....-....$2,001 oond Gulf Gasolin e*-o , t..*,, . - . .H wa deindan"ctb inconveieneo arlf-n .109 ect" dvnae fo ru ac O a ighng and -Igni noamie he stanarof thpew< icneneof farm life- --n thats ano electricpan toecgivec nustabe sme, whs thatitnwould : asiygoperated and eur Iit yumil te standard sage nd Acltelectric ghtand eu rne ptae tich Pelctr--p..nt tive s nuesti benginenon, Do atonul teier-e ouplivaed threpirasDe yarling wilerat abou r.eqpunds oitl feed.ecInothese exeimnt theLego houiletsn at 8punse and h yArclgs 5.5 ti pounds offed for thepla prodctio ofoe oene. The me fee * *in prod one de*n Oral-purcpots eaLng consumingt4.1 tAe T a s re eTl aesgPed aad B value home s-homa s Dayton .00 ciyava nt aesteor rural... .... .00 saeliv e n whouringi....--..-n moils te tanar of thew ~lecriciy-ad Bthy gkewsh * e , e * ' * - - . . " . *5,00 Sat men who It required five :d the d:,:- measure up to t who set out There were five: plant tht DELCO-LIGH' mmunities. market three at talent had T oday DELCO ion Equip- and comforts of :>rld- Thousand farm needs and It is providing,, ical electric ligh to pump water ervice in a arator, vacuum not getout and other small .And everywrher< attention- cy-and actual] t must last LIGHTI for farms and country homes. i- no belts --only one place to y-RUNS ON KEROSENE riter, S. C., Dea 1, Columbfa, S. C., Distrib', . hio, Makers of DELCO-LIGHT Products ra mer ando baIyadpor reqefis rwh t he Leghrnasare especiall dptdho use on Theremereie pars.!z DLO-G Profitbe egg rkto thre lary taensut ofd prodary DLaCra raion Eqips comores our nishin jutThcesan armto nreds anpduc thes prvingan most econo ical gyelecri anghin tai th tod peuirmnt ateth saeie. A argoodeg-ayn vauum notainin ome anma oteinan< Live Svry<er raetion-homa, Manaer LIGE .. ari ....d...$1,65.0 Tomen. ... ......$,685 .00 Rode.. Allo Mazes oDECOrdIGH Pandubrc SAL S C WEEK FO 1 he oenhnatal-uos tieds abig MUL and breigproRsesteg Wfrragns, Hakarsad Faulrm s ' o f. at w *" A years to develop a r than te:t hese specification3. 7a, s of hard engineering effort' I before the first plant was put Ld a half years ago. -LIGHT is furnishing tche cOvt electricity to more than Seve: homes. an abundance of clean, bright,E t for these homes. It is furnishin 'operate washing mnachine, chi: cleaner, electric iron, milking r machinery. it is demonstrating its wonderful y paying for itself in time and lab< I. rs. considlerable bulk. Corn and wheat are the two be'st grains for poultry feeding, although wheat can be fed alone better than corn, wvhich is in elinedl to be fattening. Oats and bare ley, on account of their higher fiber conlt( it ,are not as goodi as5 cornan wvheat, while rye is not well relishedi by fowls and isseldiom fed. MoIly grains should niever be fed poultry, although wheat screenings or slightly dlamagedl grain sometimes may be used to adlvantage. Menu Makeups for Biddy. A good maiish consist of 16 poundls of meal, (1 1-2 pounds of meat s'cap, 1 ptoundl of bran, and 1 pound of mid dlings, which should . be fed supple I mentariy to the scraitch mixtur e of 1 )Ck Comp DORT C .....-...----$1,090.00 1 Ton 2 Ton ... -... ............ $ ,0Q0.00 USED CARS stock of Iplements. conne of 2 whea of ba 'Tih twicc 3 to the I of ti two may dry kept ho1)1 beco theii in a grai of n TUl judJ to s witl enet G abol an < dail Roc dots or. 7 1 ser* l0)) 100 rail fee abc an< pot cur IHe would hi cot er) back of on on the me !ai )a niences eg ty-five ta thl .onozn- wi g power er rn, sep- he zachire, Co sa efficien- or ) saved. C e of Inl t t if 1 0 ti 1 l) It t pound each of eracked corn, wheat, and oats. Aniother good mlash conIsists of 2 poundos of corn meal or barley meal, 1 pound of mlidd~lings, 1 pound of meat or fish scrap, which should be fedi in comb~linationl with a scraltch nlixture( of 2 pounds of cracked corn), 1 ->ounid of oats, or 1 pound of wheat or ha rley. A third valuable mash con sists of 3 pounds of corn meal, 1 poundio (f meatiI scrapl, which should be fed in combination with the seratchel mix ture of 2 pounids (If cracked corn andI 1 poundi of oats. Still another practiceal mash mixture consists of 9 pound4 (f corn1 meal, 5 poumnds of middllings, 41 pounlds of bran, 2 pioundls of cottoni seed1 or gluten meal, 2 pounds(1 of mea t scrap, 2 per cent hone mieal, fed in Phone No. 20 any ORBITT1I TRUCKS 1%'/ Ton 2%2 Toun 3%z Ton Gulf Lubricants ction with a scratch combination pounds cracked corn, 1 pound of b, 1 pound of oats, and 1 pound rley. scratch mixture should be fed daily, preferably in litter from 5 inches deep on the floor of enhouse, feeding about one-third e mixture in the morning and hirds in the afternoon. The mash be fed dry or wet, although the mash is more common, it being constantly before the fowls in the er. If hens show a tendency to me too fat, make them work for feed by feeding the scratch garin deep litter, by feeding less scratch n, and by reducing the' quantity teat scrap in the mash. ie feeder must exercise his own ment. in deciding how much grain apply, as the amount should vary I the different fowls and at differ seasons of the year. enerally a good standard is to feed at one quart of scratch grains and qual weight of mash (1 1-2 quarts y) to 13 hens of the general-pur breeds, such as the I'lymoutI ks, Rhode Island Reds, or Wyan es ,or to 11 hens of the smaller egg breeds. This would he about -2 pounds each of scratch of itch grains and of mash daily to Leghorns. If hens have free ge or large yards containing green I a general-purpose hen will eat ut 75 pounds of feed in a year I a Leghorn will eat about. 55 inds, in addition to the green sto" sumted. ns Need Plenty of Protein. leat scrap or some- anima' feed I in protein is one of the important stituents of the mash. In the Gov ment experiments a pen of pullets free range, which received no at scrap or animal protein feed, I only 90 eggs each in a year, com red with yields of from 125 to 150 rs each from fowls fed rations con ning meat scrap. The eggs from pen no meat scrap was feu; cost cents more a dozeln for feed than en the meat scrap was used in the Lion. Fish meal or fish scrap can used to replace the meat, scrap and mpares favorably with the good ade of meat scrap containing the me per cent of protein. Skim milk buttermilk, either sweet or sour, is cellent for erplacing part or all of the meat scrap. The milk may be eel in mixing the mash if a moist ash is fed, or it can be kept before e fowls as a drink. If clabbered and d thick or like cheese, hene will eat ough of it to replace all the meat rap neeled. A little bone hMal akes an exoellent add ition to the ash or it can be used to replace part the meat scrap. Green cut hone, fresh and sweet, will also take the lace of meat scrap if fed daily at the te of one-thirdt to one-half ounce the hen. IEl.\lA GOl.D.lAN REI.EASE) .leff'erson (ity, Mo., Sept. 28.--Upon l0 release here todcay of Em ma Gold man from the \l is-ouri State Peni 'ntiary, prison olicials annoumced lie receiPt oif t elegraeph ic ad v ice fromii Vasinrgtoni that a huond eof 81 I50,0)it ad been given for her a ppearance at 11 is I slandl Octocber 3t to ans5wer to clhange of being an undlesi rable citi en. She issuited a staitemen't criti i-zlng coindlitionis at the prison, sonie if wh ichi matters slit saitd she wvould acy before federal ant horities. - 00OD 70 SEALt0D 'INS ONLY AT YOUS2 G42OCER~S M4AKWELL HOUSE ,COFFE, * CYPRESS SASH ~ DOORS ~ BLINDS I MOULDINGS I MILL WORK