Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / Jan. 25, 1914, edition 1 / Page 14
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THE CHARLOTTE NEWS, JANUARY 25, 1914. r5r Poultry Department (CONDUCTED BY UNCLE JOD ' '" 'k vseaderT intefesfoa " in' Poultry an Invited "to 'iuidress'' k communications on any points relating to the industry either to The News Poultry Department, or to Mr. Joseph Wardin, lz Route No. 7, Charlotte. , j ( v v t, i . '- ;v; ; C ' " r " " ' v ' " "V ' " 'i T ' 'i " ' ' ' '' " " ' 'v ' PLAN TO ABOLISH WAR BY GENERAL STRIKE. STATE SHOW DATES. ie and' it will be more profit than can be Charlotte, N. C, outhcaste-u, De cember oO-ol, 1011, January 1, 2, 11)1-1. !W.r JR. Byford, secretary. ".Siias, we ought to do something for ourshens to induce then: to lay. Can t l(tll?t Ul -v' . w ' ' . . , t 3 . C. TP money as well as so mauy tanures. maut? uu au ucie num sume i:iutr&. ji The best birds or even good breed- one can clear a profit of fifty cents a ins stockcannot'be bought for a song,; hen (which means alter paying all ex and the sooner we get this idea fixed reuses), and uo labor u hired, there the better off we will be. We older, is not only the profit, but the pay for breeders can look back over the past, the time employed, and we see the useless waste of time. Rapid Growth Desirable, and monev, by our poor judgment or: knowledge and unwise buying of poor! W e have known cnicks to weigh ,,-PHn stool-. So man v amateurs nave h-l j'uuuua "tu ccrS j'u. h Indianapolis, Ind., Jan. 24. "Abolish war by the general strike." Tliis plan was endorsed here today by the bien nial corvention of the United Mine W'qrkers of America. Delegates of the American miners to the next "World's Mining Congress to be held in Europe this summer, were 1 instructed to work for an international j agreement providing for a suspension of industry in case war is declared I between nations. The six hundred K. Hardie have already gone on rec ord in favor of such a move. With President Charles H. Moyer and Vice President Charles E. Honey of the Western Federation of Miners in the city, "plans were completed to night for a meeting F.unday of the mining department of the American Federation of Labor at which the Colorado and Michigan strikes will be discussed. Consolidation of the two mining organizations will also be broached. "Yea. we can biibstribe for a poultry paper, but I'll bet the lieus won't look of'"tbe vaiue of stocks, and j is an exception, however, to have sucn Pot Pourri. thev trv to save their means by buy- weight, but the tact that it can be I in-' the cheapest to be had. They! done is evidence that there U room write to this one and that, often se-jfor improvement in the matter of lectin" the toek of the cheapest! i aiding irjers tor raarivet. u is seiaom breeders which is the first great mis-; that a brood of chicks, on the major take thev make, wasting time and i of Farms, will exceed two pounds monev as well i when three months old. The sooner ' v-;r .i.M-.ti.:-e nnalitv for nuantity.' the chicks reach a marketable age r,. ;r vr.r mosms "will not oer- the sooner the care I Ui II . U H 1 i . . v -v - . - . unit n e linth tiipn si, slow and choose oualitv everv time, for the best are u on me nro.n. u way ;uso inen the cheapest and in starting withj'ioned that with early chicks the dif- siu-h vou onlv rush the goal of sue- ierence ot a montu s growtn is to .h.i.-i win finH.thflt the ........ have them reach tue market that January and February eggs are the, Yrds can be bought at any old price 'much sooner,, and, of course, not inly most fertile of the year, -he hens January ought to see all the pens miied ill), and in their regular quar tets. February and .-larch are the months we Southern nreedcrs ought to hatch every egg we can. If you h-aVe ne.cr tried it. do so this time a'Vui my word for it, ou will never fail' -afterwards to get out as many c-hfeks as you can early. U, you provided ample grce.i iuou L. & N. TO BE INVESTIGATED BY SENATE COMMITTEE. .,hr.o ' labor ceaos. and the greater the nrof- carcnmg investigation . i . . are not so lar irom ineir inuuu ts iu 3rfve drained their vitality by long laying. The males are live and active. l is the very best time ol" the year Vb-yrei out strong, healthy chicks. Don't take the advice of the north ern poultry journals 'o which a great many of you subscribe, and wait till 4pri'l or May; with these writers, tne sround in February and March is cov $red with snow, there were no growing greens for his fowls; the .fowls are ijrobably confined in a close house and ridllJaHowed om in the yards at all. "VVnat eggs he is getting are forced by carful feeding, many of them laid "tfrjifta the thermometer is away down. vL.-course it is too early for him to Iiateh successfully. tJB'iit see how different conditions are -wiih you. Your fowls probably have not been confined a day during the iater and maybe won't be: they are running out in the un and air with th&- thermometer around forty-five or fftyVthey are filling their crops day aXter day with good, succulent, green food, and if you are. giving them a little- meat food every other day they Am ' . ... i,.. , i-5 tha p--fr-A wpiclit fraitifrf hut thr and now ana men ciose n&ieu uu.cia v. , ..0..v D , will ur-e and persuade- over-anxious prices are higher earlier in the season, breeders to ship them inferior stock. A month means, for -arly friers, some But remember this great truth, the ' times as much as from ten to fifteen best the kind to start with to get cents per pound more than is obtained the cream from everv branch of the! later, which is more than enough to industrv cannot be had for PS cents, jpay for the whole cost of the food, and vou make a mistake in buying! Our most careful experiments made such 'for all such as a rule are from 'show, that' it costs not over eight poor' blood or haphazzard breeding, j cents to feed a chick until it weighs Thev niav select you such as will one pound and it is seldom that any please vou in looks, vet disappoint- gain in weight, whether of adults or ments and disgust await you in the chicks t any age, exceeds six cents end for no matter how grand such for each additional pound. The profit, birds raav look, just as sure as you, however, is the rapidity of growth. A breed them, that sure will they pro-j chick costs something more than the duct the same as they are from. feed it consumes, such as shelter, We have had twenty vears in the care," labor, the egg from which it is buines-: and feel proud of the re- hatched, and the loss of time by the cord of' our birds have made; yet hen in incubation. When time and la during this lone experience we have bor are saved it is so much taken found that those who make a success from the cost and added to the profit, are those who start out right with Whether the chicks weigh two pounds the best. Pay the price and buy of in ten weeks, or three months the cost some rood breeder vou can trust. , of fool" will be nearly the same, as Washington, Jan. 24. Following the refusal of General Counsel H. L.. Stone, of the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company to submit certain information requested by the inter state commerce commission a resolu tion was introduced in the senate tonight by Luke Lea, provided for a into tne methods and practices of the Louis ville & Nashville Railroad, and the ownership of certain subsidiary rail road companies by the Louisville & Nashville." Five senators, according to the terms of the resolution would be ap pointed to assist the interstate com merce commission in the Louisville Ac Nashville investigation. This commit tee would be especially empowered to require the production of records. RATE HE SET FOR' FEB. SIXTH Washington. D. a. Jan. 24.-The in terstate commerce commission today set February 6th at Washington for hearing of arguments on the fourth section of applications numbers 8806 an 8807 of the Southern railway and other carriers, which asks authority to establish lower rates from Stv Louis, the Ohio river crossings, Memphis and Nashville, Tenn., and Decatur and Huntsville, Ala., to stations in North Carolina, than rates concurrently appli cable on like traffic from, to and be tween intermediate points. , These are the applications, decisions in which will change the whole rate situation for the state. The applica tions were filed as the result of the agreement between the railroads and the North Carolina state authorities, following the calling of the extra sesd sion to determine the matter. Hearings in the case were held by Interstate Commerce Commissioner Clark, at Greensboro, December 16th, and Virginia appeared in opposition to the granting of the application. How to Make the Back Yard Keep Chickens tir UNION MINERS WANT TO RESTRAIN IMMIGRATION. . r Owned by Charles Eraser, Marlton, N. ..J., winner at New York and elsewhere. arfe 'shelling out the eggs for you. Don't you see the difference? It is wchat makes your county the best in tb United States for chicken grow ing, provided you will take advantage offrour opportunities and get at it now. aTfT April and May the northern poul- tfyman will be; just where you are itfjw, ana he will be running his hens and incubators over-time to get out cfiicks. He will stop in July and Au gist (which corresponds with ouj April and May.) jilt you put off your hatching until sjhmmer you will find that the hens wiill over-heat the eggs and that they wtpn't hatch so well, besides the eggs i . ax not. so iertne. Your late natched clicks will butt right into the hot father, and there will come sore had, drying up. and that sleepy dis ease that gets so many of them. May b this last is lice, may -e not, what ever it is, you don't have it in early hatched chicks. "53ome people say that it io too much trouble to raise early chicks, they re quire housing, etc., and for this rea son, which is a lazy man's reason and ojtight to be no reason, they put it off. iln calculating for arly chicks re SBember they will be at least a month lter than the beginning, of your prep arations for them. If you order the eggs from a breeder there is a week after the order before you get them; ttfen you put them under the hen and gfce keeps them three weeks. So if you want chicks out in February., you must sit the eggs in January. If you want tnem in March, February must start itSe setting. We are very apt to over jook tne aeiay. ine eariy uirc, you Juiow! f ;; Buying Standard Bred Poultry. ' One more season of buying and seil fg poultry is with us. Many disap pointed amateurs with blasted hopes Will drop from the field of action, and others buoyant with lofty aspirations vipll enter the battle arena. .To those contemplating taking up tile poultry business, I just want to ?ffer a few suggestions. There is something- in the poultry business, aiid to the ambitious, wide-awake, Mistling man or woman the induce ments are. the same as in any other H business. And it is very fascinating, t provided yon start right, and to the smarting is the point I wish to call p yiur attention. The buying of poor, cleap, haphazardly bred stock the one great fatal mistake h s& many make, and the Have him to select for you good, hon est line bred stock and mate them for you just the same as he would breed them. Go slow, studying the birds and the mating; then, with a lit tle grit, energy and common horse sense, you can make the poultry busi ness a prosperous one, with half the time and money you would waste on cheaper stock. It Pays. Raising chickens in something like raising babies, one has to use com mon sense as well as book knowledge, and sometimes the experience of our grandmothers is of more service than all the scientific theories of learned practitioners. So we would advise those who would like to go into the poultry business in a small way, not to be frightened at the bills of fare furnished by many advisers on the subject, nor the skifully planned chick en houses, nor yet by the variety of breeds recommended by different en thusiasts. There are a few vital points that you should remember. Yo umust have ground enough, enclosed or oth erwise, where your fowls can have plenty of exercise, and scratch for a j portion of their food. Then their house, no matter how simply con structed, must be dry, with good ven tilation, no draughts and plenty of sunshine; it must be kept clean by whitewashing' and spraying the roosts especially, and a careful watch kept over the fowls to see that they are free from lice. Your good housekeep ing, if a woman, will be as apparent in the hen house as in your own domi cile. It is not necessu"y to buy expen sive feed. Scraps from the table, fome grain, occasional warm mashes with chopped bone and some kind of green food, such as cabbage leaves, beet and turnip tops also chopped, and clean grit, all are easily provided and prepared. An abundance of clear water is necessary. Change the diet frequently. Don't feel the same thing all the time. Don't give too much at once. If overfed the hens will be come fat and lazy and will stop work Make them earn their living. What Is a Strain? Many breeders advertise their strain when in reality they are not their strain at all. It takes a number of years to establish a strain of fowls, which rightly can be called a strain and a br-eder has not any right to call this my strain unless he has by careful breeding stamped the birds so that they may be recognized from other birds of the same variety, either in size, shapa or color markings or both Many breeders buy a bird here and there, and after breeding one year ad vertise their strain which is wrong, misleading and should not be coun tenanced. Flocks and Yards. it will consume more food when grow- ing rapidly. Late chicks do not grow as rapidly as those hatched early. The reason is that after the warm weather sets in they are subject to insects, pests and lice torment them night and day. When chicks make no grbwth, seeming to remain at about the same size, although well cared for, it will be found that the head lice are at fault. It is then that patience ceases to be a virtue, and chicks sent to market as early as possible in. order to avoid loss of feed and labor. When a brood of chicks comes off, whether early or late in the season, it will pay to get into market whenever theyr are old enough, and any extra labor bestowed will be more than gained by the short period of growth from hatching to marketing. Indianapolis, Ind., Jan. 24. Laws to prohibit further immigration until all . surplus laborers in the United States are fully employed were fa vored by a resolution adopted to day at the convention of the United Mine Workers of America. Abolition of international war by means of a general strike was pro posed in a resolution introduced by Duncan McDonald, of Illinois. The resolution was adopted and referred to the International Mining Congress. Donald declared it the only meth od to stop international wars. He de clared that the burden of wars, both in money and life, fell on the laboring classes. Starting in the Poultry Business. Dear Uncle Joe I am thinking of starting to raise chickens. I own a house and thirty acres of land about fifteen miles from Charlotte, and would like to know: 1, What kind of chick ens are best for this climate? How much capital is necessary? 3,, "When can I look for first even small results? Kindly favor me by answering these questions. W. A. A., City. Answer. I would recommend either the American or Mediterranean varie ties, Rocks, Wyandottes, Reds, Leg horns, Minorcas, Ancona. One can start on a small scale requiring very little capital, or on a much larger scale, spending from $100 up for build ings and as much for fowls. You can begin to get returns as soon as the fowls lay or when you are able to market some of the chicks. I would recommend that you commence on a small scale, not giving up your regu lar job until you are positive that you can make a success of it. Buying Extra Fowls. Dear Uncle Joe I am offered a lot of one hundred fowls cheap, and as I have a large number myself, what should I do with them before bring ing them on my place? E. W. D., Old Fort, N. C. Answer Quarantine them on a sep arate plot for a while, as they may bring lice or disease into your nock Even if but one fowl among the one hundred is not well and free from lice there may be damage done by the spread of disease or lice. ROW DISTURBS MEETING CLOAK MAKERS' UNION. New York, Jan. 24. There was a general iist fight this afternoon on the platform in Cooper Union at a mass meeting of the cloakmakers' union called to consider the resigna tion of Dr. Issac A. Hourwich, chief clerk of the grievance committee of the union. Abraham Rubin, the chair man, was assaulted on the platform. There has been dissension in the union over Dr. Hourwich's tenure. Em ployers demanded his retirement upon threat of abrogating the agreement with workers by which peace in the trade has been maintained. For a time a strike was feared but yester day Dr. Hourwich announced his resignation. VALUABLE WILLS RETURNED TO VIRGINIA CLERK OF COURT. Fairfax Courthouse, Va., Jan. 24. E. P. Eggleston of New Lor Ion, Conn., has returned to the clerk of the coun ty court here the will of Hanna Washington and other valuable docu ments which were stolen from the courthouse at the time the will of Martha Washington was stolen. Mr. Eggleston stated that he did not know that the documents had been stolen until he Lad read ac counts of efforts to recover the Mar tha Washington will, now in the pos session of J. P. Morgan in New York. ARKANSAS STARTS SUITS TO OUST SIX COTTON OIL CP'S. FROM STATE Little Rock. Ark.. Jan. 24. Suits were filed here today by Attorney General Moose against six cotton oil companies asking that they be oust ed from the state and that fines of $4,215,000 be assessed against each because of alleged membership in a trust, formed to control the price ot cotton seed. The defendants are: The Buckeye Cotton Seed Oil Company, Arkansas Cotton Oil Company, the Little Rock Cotton Oil Company, Southern Cotton Oil Company, Dixie Cotton Oil Company and Rose City Cotton Oil Company. Suits against the companies were filed under an anti-trust act which provides that it shall be unlawful to form any combination to fix the price of any article sold in this state. The fine is from $200 to $5,000 tor each offense and each day such com bination is in existence shall consti tute a separate offense. Attorney General Moose said today that many other cotton oil compa nies in Arkansas had formed unlawful combinations and that he would soon institute suits. Why Not Keep Chickens? It's Lots of Fun. Ami a Little Want Ad Will Find Regular Buyers for the Eggs . Just think how convenient and what a lot of pleasure it must b t get your eggs fresh and to have an occasional chicken from your v- ."nock." The expense of chickens is almost nothing and the pleasure vnt get from keeping them is great. Besides, if you work it right, there is lo of "pin money" in it. A little Want Ad inserted in this paper will ?ei vou into immediate touch with people who will start you off. Another -ii Want Ad will find families who will buy your eggs regularly. But prrhsf.j you are a dealer in chickens, eggs and the like. A little Want Ad will rs l v your message to thousands of homes and produce for you steady customed It is a good scheme to keep our little Want Ads working for you week in " forYoujoA&pn and week out. The cost is trivial. It wF?r2, T f,e?" " - M . w CID. 1U paV i.-lR I is a money-mating investment to iddrSw" ,'B STATE LABOR COMMONER ORDERS ARREST OF MAYOR OF PORTLAND Portland, Ore., Jan. 24. Mayor H. C. Albee was arrested early today on a warrant issued at the instance of State Labor Commissioner O. P. Hoft", charging violation of the eight hour law, held by the supreme court to apply to all public institutions in Oregon. Mayor Albee is charged with hav ing violated the law by refusing to put the firemen and police on eight hour shifts. He contends this would require a considerable addition to the police force and an increase of 200 per cent in membership of the fire department. ADS IN THIS COLUMN 1-cent-a-word Mail your ads early. Stamps taken. INCREASE IN SURPLUS FREIGHT CARS. Chicago, Jan. 24. Compared with statistics for the corresponding date in 1913 there was a marked increase in the number of surplus freight cars on railroad ties throughout the country on January 15, according to the American Railway Association service bulletin issued today. The report shows there were 217, 274 idle cars on January 15, an in crease over last year of 164,044 cars. The total car surplus on January 1 was 190,521. HARD JOB RAISING BURIED SUBMARINE. t i The maximum number of fowls al lowed for a flock is fifty, but unless the poultry" house is very large a flock of twenty-five hens will lay more eggs than fifty, as they will be better cared for and have better accommo dations. Double runs avoid filth to a certain extent, and also permit of growing green food in one yard while the hens occupy the other. When large numbers of fowls are desired, they will thrive better if kept in flocks of twenty-five and will give good results if well cared for; but ev- ry one expects to give his fowls good care hence the term "well cared for" means something that will have to bo learned. ji eacn nen in the flock gives a profit of one dollar a vear it will be about the average. Do npt forget that in a flock of several hundred there will be sick hens, fat hens, poor hens, old bens, puljets and hens that win eat twice as much as the others There is also labor and food. The ground required for twentv-five hens should not be less than fifty by two nunarea leet, which maybe divided into . two yards, each twenty-five by one hundred teet, with a house ten by xwenty teet. The number will be about equal to -one hundred hens on one acre, and if they give a profit of one dollar a hen in a year, or .fifty .dollars from fifty hens on one acre, Shapes of Eggs. Dear Uncle Joe. Which eggs are correct for hatching, the long and pointed ones or the round one? I un derstand that the long ones produce males and the others pullets. W. S. G., Southside, N. C. Answer The shape of the egg does not influence the sex. Use only eggs of normal size and shape. Shapes of eggs are sometimes peculanties of in dividual hens. CHAMPION 'POSSUM HUNTER. (Lincoln County News.) Would you think there were 192 'possums in this part of the world that would allow themselves to be caught up the "simmon tree." That number 192 have been captured this fall by Mr. Clarence Mode, who lives on Reepsville route 2. He has the best dog for 'possums in this part of the country. From the number of 'pos sums caught itw as thought he might have owned a pack '-of 'possum dogs, but he informed us that he only has one "good dog" and that he and his dog knew where all the 'possums up in North Brook live. Mr. Mode caught one in Martin Shidle swamD that was the largest he ever saw; after being dressed this said big 'possum looked and weighed up to a 6 months' old pine rooter. He has promised to meet us this side of Reepsville some night for a hunt. Plymouth, England, Jan. 24. There was little likelihood tonight that the buried submarine A 7 would be raised before next week. Because ol the exceedingly rough sea and high wind today the salvage workers were forced to stop and it was said they would do no work tomorrow. So tar the divers have not been able to get sufficient material around the vessel. FOUR FIRES IN BLOCK AROUSE POLICE SUSPICIONS, Pittsfield, Mass., Jan. 24. Three fires within an hour in the city hall here today led the police to believe that an incendiary had been at work in the building. The arst two fires were extinguished without serious damage. The third burned out the assessor's , office and destroyed many valuable papers. An hour later a fourth incendiary fire was discovered in Dunham block nearby. This fire spread throughout the block, but was got under control alter an hour's work. Choate Not Seriously III. .ew i orK, Jan. 24. Uenial was made by the family today that Joseph n. cnoate, former ambassador to Eng land, is not seriously ill as reported. He is suffering from a cold but noth ing more. Choate was S2 years old toaay. . TO PROBE DEEP INTO COLORADO STRIKE. Washington. Jan. 24. The first blast in opening wide the Calumet and Colorado strike situations will be fired early . next week in the house. The resolution providing for probes, already acted on favorably by the democratic caucus and the rules committee will be ratified by" the house. At that time, Representative MacDonald, of Michigan, plans to set off a charge that will head the probers toward capitalists and citi zens alliance members in the Calumet district, whom he will name as re- eponsible for distressing conditions in the copper country. Plans for the sittings of the probe committee will be arranged at an early date. TO ENTER BIG BUYING MOVEMENT IN STEEL INDUSTRY Pittsburg, Pa., Jan. 24. The steel industry in the United States is en tering into one of . the biggest buy ing movements in history, and within sixty or ninety days, all of the mills will be working to their capacity. mat was tne announcement of Colonel H. P. Pope, first vice president of the Carnegie Steel Company, here today. Not only in the steel industrv but m all lines of human activity, worK plenty ot work and at good wages is the outlook, he declared. In suport of his contention lie cited the recent reduction of rates for money oy tne tianit oi jsngjand and the Na tional Banks of France and Germany And to further show that monev has become "easier" with a general return of confidence, he called attention to the ten-fold over subscription to bonds lately sold by the state - f New York Farmers, Colonel Pope said, have vastly increased their acreage, assur ing increased agricultural outputs and a demand lor farm machinery, thou sands of miles of wire fencing and added minions ot tin cans, crates, bar reis and boxes. Manufacturing: nlants warehouses and railroad yards are practically without stock and orders large and small are being received daily from those sources. BILL FOR INTFRNATinMAi EDUCATION INTRODUCED Ten Thousand Dollar Theft. Morristown, N. J., Jan. 24. The theft of a set of solid silver service valued - $10,000 from the home of James S. McLean here was reported to the police today. The robbers ig nored all pieces of plated silver. Washington, Jan 24. A bill to ere ate a board of international education and to appropriate an amount equal to one per cent or the army, and navy appropriation for 1914 for "world, edu cation" was introduced in the house this afternoon by Representative Gil lett, ot Massachusetts. MR. BRYAN HAS COLD. Washington, Jan. 24. Because of a elight cold Secretary Bryan remain ed at home today. His indisposition did not. prevent him from receiving callers and keeping in touch with the state department. Us W&KTED Families desidnr fcs freeh eggs delivered reg-ilerly sr-ait-" ""',-,, i tne ftneat poultry farms in this"s -i, We will alio suppi? the finest dressed r'-lfne to order at Ibe lowest aarka pries Aditiss- The Want Ad Way" POULTRY "11TS" ONE-CENT-A-WORD. FOR SALE Two extra fine S. C. R. I. Red Cocks, prize winners, hatched 1912, good sires, prices right. Also some Cockerels at $1.00 each. S. A. Grier, Lenoir, N. C. 18-2t-sun. WANTED To hatch your chick;- h, my new mammoth Incubator. Each customer has separate compan ment. O. T. Hallman. Phone FOR SALE Several small incubators and colony coops. Must sell Mon day. O. T. Hallman. Charlotte Phone 2439-L. -jr-V F YOU WOULD SELL your chickens and eggs quick atatisfactory prices use The News Want Ad Way. 18-tf. YOU CAN SELL your stock and eggs through this column. One-cent-a-word. Count the words and mail the ad early. Stamps taken. S. C. BUFF ORPINGTONS. Entered CHICKEN FANCIER HUNT SETTING BIG INCUBATORS FOR EARLY HATCHING Mr. C. W. Hunt, who uvn.- ami operates the large chicken au'l cs; farm three miles out, on the. State- rr h ville Road, has begun setda cubators for early hatching. He u?e the entire basement of his hou.se. for an incubator 'room, and has a t'urnao heating plant installed, lie ha cigiii or ten large incubators, holding from 150 to 400 eggs each, witn a iarae cemented brooder-house to acomnio- C i J i. H-, T1...U v.uvvu lour um ul jam at vKe roiuuidate tne "biddies" when hatched. Show, won two firsts, two seconds.- Mn Hunt has about m whiie u. Eggs $l.o0 for lo. A few males for horn neng on hig ace (po Q,hvr kjn sale. Orpington Poultry lards, Cam- of chicken on his piace.) To the elm eron, N. L. ""jen lover" his chicken farm is an ii I teresting place to visit. SINGLE COMB White Leghorn and Rhode Island Red Eggs $1.00 for-0LDESX HOUSE EMULOYE 15. delivered anywhere in Charlotte. W. E. Shaw, Route 5. 25-3t DIES AT AGE OF S4. Wasliinp-fnn .Tan 94 fiantain .loin; FOR SALE Six White Orpington i T Cnancey for 50 years a special nens ana one cock iveneibuass employe of the house of represent strain, $1.00 each. Need room S. L. i uives and hoider of the longest con Vaughn, 511 Commercial Building. u service record at the capito'. rilOUS ii(Di. i'-.rHol horo tnrlsr at rhp ar nf S4. lit was a Wahingtonian. FOR SALE Black Minorcas and Barred Plymouth Rocks, best in the state, including all our prize win ners. Eggs for hatching, $2.00 to $5.00 -per 13. Buy your stock and eggs from an expert, w-ho knows how to mate and breed for best re sults. Have your yards mated up by a professional judge. We will do the w-ork for you at reasonable price. R. L. Simmons, 408 West Fifth street, Charlotte, N. C. 25-sun-tf i: FOR SALE One cockerel, four pul lets, Columbian Wyandottes show birds $15.00; one cockerel six hens, White Orpingtons, good breeders, $8.00; a few cockerels and pullets yet for sale of Partridge and White Wyandottes, Black Minorcas and Brown Leghorns, $2.00 each and up according to quality. Eggs from the best matchings in the country of Partridge, White and Columbian Wy andottes, Black Minorcas and Brown Leghorns now ready at $2.00 to $5.00 for 15. Sandy Run Poultry Yards, Ellenboro, N. C. 23-3t-eod TIME NOW to sell chickens and eggs. This column will find the buyers. 'Nuf 'Ced. 20-5t IT Fowls 11 Get Klsfjow Vou can male your henslay and hare egg & to teU now when egg 1 are high by usine Con key Laying Tonic tfgafanr M Taac PfTa .rtKitr flocfc in ccndH turn, hmfattmi lurixr Jionfrjr bid. 25cS0cand JI. i pub $!.,() uk! q.. ASK FOK CONKIY't Plfcf POUlTtY Otf Fof meeting. fV ipjT or mrprc pijf in the drioijfj aftr Conkeyfe Roup Remedy (-onii tjVf rh- t mr yenr Caeic 25 rnt Davidson & Wolf, West End Drug Co. U. G. Hager, 301 N. Graham i- The Woodruff Pharmacy, Bowen's Drug Store. Davidson & Wolfe Headquarters For POULTRY FOOD AND SUPPLIES 6 ' : -,:,, : Corno Hen Feed, Corno Chick Feed Conkley's Staring Food for Little Chicks Pratt's Specially Prepared Food for Little Chicle AGENTS FOR THE Cypher's Incubators and Brooders International Sanitary Hovers 220 S. College St. Charlotte, N. C. -IS 1' t if i ill
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 25, 1914, edition 1
14
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