Cape May County Times, 27 November 1925 IIIF issue link — Page 14

pipf May County Poultry News BY UNCLK JACK «du Po«Ury C *

T* Hi*h Ecs Fre**>-

tion

By TYllliUD JohMlMM

-B.,r JohnrtoB*. of Um trdian •Ml piolttr Farm, Tom KItot.

W J >■ » r l>> *.

hit!.'*' prnifn— of tkta

f »*d personally

kick *» I,lf P< w,t n' rrataralty. and ,af plraBura U Birin* Um ctiry r»i*er» and r—dw^ of th*

hue- 'k*

K u!':ym«n of lk« Now Jonwy PmUiry * —

Aito'K City yisi I- "e#i

ry AaaoelaUm la tk iv roaroattdaJkia t, i to mm4 It tvma i >4 I trost r°v wll tala toformation t **UHCLK htX.

b i be hroai •I tur Ne« Jl pnrtwally all

dorti'* »*y bo dletdod fflto throe Mptrtir ktepo. We feed oar bwdm m that Uoy wJU *i.e m vcs 'bat will prelate hi - tkK-U froee which we wUl healthy yotleu that will Me of «aytay »Mcty

red "■ an as to *ot tt u-ym oar•nlj aad eooaectedly. dearly. >. rradateoUy aad comively. We wUl bow leave

CAPE HAT COUMTT TOCO. lUBAT. lOVmXA t7. UH.

them well K hetrhlftc

But thW real

- _—— re- — better Ion* These oats are, of couree, aad euldrer than when they Lad la addmon to the gereitnated oats to apead nearly twa-thlrda of the It. ite ration. ^ hooradUia, „„ the pert-bcs The mretEoln* ie nor Bret feedwalttn* *T time to eat. On the las etep for ht*h <«* production we ara inn From ihle ferdln* method we *et ' the kind of chirks we want to

help tie pet a hl*h e** production ttarin* the foliowtn* year. This 1; as much n feedln* enerntlal to that year'a pioductlon as the feedla* that year Itself, because, tf we did not have a vigorous lot of chicks to produce *ood pullets the Anal feeding of these pullets would not be effective ia producing a hl*h egg production. The second step In feeding for high egg production Is to change the chicks produced by these breeders into puileU In the beet pomlble shape for entering Into a year of

high production.

sot IcsflBg own he perches, there fbr* vrp ara careful to gel every pdbapeetlee breeder out dr produr Uon by November 1. and then give hbr two months with practically ** producUon, put plenty of time td eat the right kind of ration to botld her up and stare up reserves of energy to put Into her hatching •gen tor tha 4 months that fol

Some people have said to

"But doesn't turning on the Ihshts cause them to go into produel ion lights themselves ’are the factor

that produce* the increed* In pro

d^Uo*. !*l»( ratios mean an facredbe th produc-

thm. and lights aad a body build

body weight end in moiling birds, so Increase In production Last season, under vh’s sjetcen of lights from November 1 on. we averaged I per cent production from out brooders until Christmas, but w« bad the beet lot of heavy, yellow legged breeders we ever carried o**r. and the remits from thee* birds during the hatehlag amaoe both la Quantity of eggs aad Quality of chicks, were much above the average, aad 1 believe the •met we ever had. About Christ mss we begin feed

We cut the grain down to a total of 14 pounds, including the germinated oats, and we place our Indian Hoad mash "B" moistened. boCore iham eo that it to available all the time. The mash is totped several hours before needed pan of the germinated on is of th* grain ration mtsed with It. and altar standing several hours in a •arm room in cold weather, it Is M. By mixing this mash with warm water aad allowing it to stand for • few hears la a warn room, an oaayaUc art ton to suited 'which a the disenuwe. aad mixing wa* of the geminated oats a this action along srlli further. a* the oaBeUae* within the rzss'

pullet* and mash Is changed to "C." unices the birds seem backward in development. In which mane, mas* "B" would be continued for another month. Aa

come* marked, tbe pullets are given practically all the grain they will consume and mask "C" kept before them all the time. This will usually occur when the Bullets are between 4 W and S months old. This heavy grain and little maah feeding la kept up until the pullets have pamed (

Clay Tablets Tell History of Hittites

Pram Ancleat Archive* a Laagaagc Dead Tfiree Tfceuaad Yean

They wll! have started to produce when about 6 months old. laying their first peewee but under no consideration we feed for eggs until the puileU are past the 4-month markwould much rather be able to aay rai oui i the t

ing young stock with special ref- bad been able ot get a lot of eggs ere ace to th* comparative merit* 1 from each pullet during this of dry milk and aemi-oolld form, period. We don't want eg] yeast aad cod liver oil were also! for* 4 months, what w* want la tested oat. aad the feeding of weight and vigor in the pullet ao different prapontoas of mash and > that we will get sustained heavy grain. Alloa ether chicks production when It starts from a sr*rw used la the cxpertmeatal well-developed pullet that will not work, i it eluding tbe nrrimnry , break down or "slump" after chick pens All feeds were month or two of production. That weighed, chicks weighed at regu- to the aim of step number S as Ur Intervals, aad mortality and see tt In feeding for high egg proother records carefully kept. From duct ion. not to produce a spurt (bear testa, certain feeding results for the first month have been established which this]a high average for the year, season have given us some aplen- Feeding your young stock ao as did pullets. We have developed; to produce over-development throe different mashes which are too early aa age. aad th* su known aa Indian Head mash "A." quent breakdown of the p« "B“ and "C". Mash "A" to our after ■ short spurt starting maah aad ia composed of or underfeeding her ao that •.he following: arrived at laying age t

! weight and under-developed would

Math “A" make It practically impossible pounds Corn meal 4*9 to get a high e«S production dur-

*9 Protein 00 ** Mineral mixture 40 - Tobacco dust _ :

2 Vi gala. Cod !

mg her first year because of this handicap at the start, this step, cumber 2. Important with the other two steps In gaittng a high egg pro-

duction.

( Continued next week)

fed dry. aad atoo and without the tobacco dust our laying maah. Tbe formula this maah has already boon gleet «»a* new croaa arms tower on th* Maah "C“ to a r.on-developing, holes The electric company's body-building n.Aah. coo (ala I sg men followed after them, ralaiag only 12 per real protein, whtoh »*w liar* on tbs very top of the wr use on the young stock dry as pw*ea. the* making the tetophaae “ - ■ —■j —- w Thj

Ufied By a Mighty Nation

The decipherment of a language which died out about 2.000 years ago and the onrseellisg of the history of a forgotten nation, which was for a thousand years the third greatest empire of th* ancient world, were described by Dr. Harold H. Bender. Professor of Indo-

Putverstty. The as don la tbe HltUte Empire, which for tea cetrtnrto*. ending About 1200 B. C, was one of the three great powers of antiquity, tbe ether two bstag Egypt and Babylonia. Its language and history have been opened up by the decipherment oi clay tablets from th* royal HitUto library and archives excavated from a site in Asia Minor ninety mils* eaiA of Angcra. the capital of the Turkish Republic. The decipherment of the Rosetta unlocked the

Egypt, aad the reading of the hug* rock tnecrtptioua by Xerxes and Darius at Behtoton la Persia, which

of tbe compaaa, carrying everywhere their language, which developed into the d a u g h t e languages of Sanscrit in India. Persian. Creek. Latin. Teutonic. Celtic. Sl.\1c and a long list of others. Apparently one of th* earliest Indo-European tribe* leave the homeland wandered I Asia Minor, mixed with the aborigine- aad contributed something of the Indo-European idiom to the language. To* Indo-European element in th* HltUte seems to have special resemblance to Latin Only a small percentage of tablets have been translated, hot these have yielded facta of great historic interest. One tablet translated by Forrer, for Instance, tains the only contemporary record ao far known relating to a hero of Homer This tablet tells bow Attarissyas and tbe Achaeans. a boat 122S & C.. raided a part Asia Minor and expelled the King of Carta from his dominions and how the King of Carta !a his turn expelled AUarissyas. According to Fhrrer. Attarlaayas appear* in tbe Iliad aa Atreua. King of tbe Achaean* and father of Agamemnon, who succeeded the kingship of the Achaeans. This tablet agrees in time with the traditional dale of about 11S0 B C.. for the capture of Troy by the Achaeans under the leadership of Agamemnon. Tbe tablets indicate grant confusion of languages and peop}e throughout the Hittlte domlni In addition to tbe HltUte itself the tablets coo tala fragments of five previously unknown I several others that are known, some deciphered and

history aad civilixatioe of the Tt* rta and Euphrates Valley, have their parallel la the recovery of Um cuneiform (wedge ahaped) charactera engraved by aartent ecribes oa the clay tablets which

archiver, the treasury records, tbe official files aad the royal library of Hem. the capital of the HltUte

With the key to the language

eat of

its aad fragments of tab oh number baa edrapldiy ao that today scholars have bees able to trace the wars, royal Unas. Internationa]

power throughout Asia Minor aad Syria centuries eerlier than TOW)

K C.

HltUte language has enabled

I his dertphermcL't of Um LyUtan of this tnacrtpOon and calls th* Lydiaa language “a dialect nr

< HltUte -

several of the other ancient languages of Aata Minor and Syria which had previously defied translatkra One of these ancient mystery language* to the Lydian, which was previously known chiefly by Inscriptions founded by American excavators st Sardis, the capital of Croesus On* of the chief finds by the expedition financed by the late J. Pterpont Morgan and other wealthy Americans and led by the late Dr. Howard Crosby Butler, of Princeton Culvers tty. was an inscription on Uoce in two languages —on* Lydian and the other Aramaean By bringing the newly acquired knowledge of HltUte U bear

Thanksgiving

p-llS ye*r thankful

we *2* particularly for the blessings

» u. . The

coming

■ay promise of rich ie of viaion who act County the oppor-

but once in a

showered upo year gives ev return* to tha in Cape May

tunity that

lifetime.

May your Thanksgiving be a bappy one. _ ^

Riley Realty Co, Operator* ia Gape Bay Const/ Boat Estate Ocean City Sea Isle City

Q/th all my Worldly goods (9 thee endow

MPRESSIVE words, these, to the young bride, whether her hu»bnnd ia a man of meant or not. For, he ia her idol, her protector

But when he dies, thts name woman, if she is an average widow, i* often shocked to find that her husband'a endowment didn't amount to es much aa she thought And ahe ia farced by fate tc take her place among the workera of the world

iied by

■very Any fat' foods ora »d> represent» a real Una— jwt as ical m th—gh y— lost a day with—t pap. Keep y—r dafiara workiof for p— day aad might Pot them hare whtxe thrj pay p— 4 per crat campoaad utereat

Security Trust Company Cape May Gty, N. j.

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A widow s chance* of working are gnat. For, rtwh***™ compuco v* a life insurance compoa'v show that only 17 widows out of every 100 are left an estate large enough to provide an income Fort) aeven widows must supplement the inrextyiew they receive from husband.' estates by working And 35 widow* are solely dependent

upon their own efforts for a livelihood.

The widow', future is only one of the seven obligation, of a m^d man The other six are listed in our free booklet—“JIM M AKING S AWAKENING." together with a plan for maeting them o 01 of salary—without undue scrimping Send for your copy

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