The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, February 05, 1932, Image 6

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Hy
J observing, practical poultrymen,
the ‘highly interested commercial
control
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THE DALLAS POST, DALLAS, PA,
FRIDA
Pedestrian
Y, FEBRUARY 5, 1932.
}
HOUR LATER] 7
A Poor
Ler)
[HOUR AND 10 MINUTES LATER |
Hl THERE, FELLOW,
HAVE YOU GOT TIRE
. TROUBLE ?
D
Ih
NAW,
TIRED
JUST
TROUBLE
ps
leSauinea_
x
is, Feeding F or High Hatchability
/
ie By Prof. Paul G. Riley
When the Experiment Station, the
and
hat-
that
on
cheries agree on certain factors
hatchability the points
facts, To date there have been three
factors or facts that are agreed on by
the three groups mentioned above.
These factors are:
1. SUNSHINE, not filtered through
window glass or a heavy coating of
dust on some of the commercial pro-
‘duces, which lets the ultra violet light
into the chicken house, or cod liver
oil. | \
2. PLENTIFUL SUPPLY OF
GREEN LEAFY MATERIAL, such as
+ Alfalfa, Clover, Soy Bean,
or Blue
Grass leaves.
, 3. A COMPLETE PROTEIN.
Following a period when we have a
lot of matural sunshine, hatches are
Ordinarily during the
winter months we #trike a period when
‘the amount of | sunshine limited.
-During this period cod liver oil should,
be fed to ears birds, at the
rate of one pint of biologically tested
oil per one hundred pounds of mash.
Leafy material is usually contained
in the form of Alfalfa, in all high
quality egg mash, but it is difficult
- for a sufficient quantity of this mater-
‘ial to be put in “this egg mash, without
having a tendency to lower the pos-
\
is
sibilities and the consequent egg pro-
Therefore, it is good busi-
ness for the poultrymen to supply ad-
duction.
©
ditional green leaves, either ‘in the
form of hay or alfalfa leaves, added
to a wet mash, either in the form of
meal or courser leafy material or to
feed a commercial product made up
of a mixture of alfalfa and molasses.
The complete protein can be sup-
use of milk, but the safest way is to
use a variety of proteins, adding to the
ration, such protein carrying products
as milk, soy bean oil meal, meat
scraps, and other accepted high quali-
ty protein carrying materials. A num-
ber of these materials should be ia-
cluded in the mash, in order to as-
sure the third factor, a complete pro-
; \ !
tein. {
! - r 0
SOY BEANS WILL
HELP CORN BELT FARMERS.
OBTAIN: THEIR PROTEIN
J ; elie)
By Prof. W. B. Krueck ‘
| Farmers and feeders throughout the
| corn belt have for a great many years
depended largely upon linseed oil meal
and cottonseed meal as a source of
protein for balancing their farm grains.
Neeither of these crops has been
| general feeding sections.
| Most corn belt farmers welcome the
fact that soy bean oil meal in the fu-!
ture will be a very important factor
in affecting the cost of properly bal-
ancing live stock rations throughout
/
the corn belt. Many of the experiment i
stations have found that soy bean oil
meal, when properly supplemented
season approaches
you make a decision.
PIRE DEALER who can
feeding instructions.
DALLAS, PENNA.
“TI-0-GA FEED SERVICE
THE QUESTION OF COST
‘much in your mind as the Fall and Winter feeding
INVESTIGATE TI-O-GA FEED SERVICE before
j You will be surprised at
what savings you will make by using this method
as compared with any other.
TALK THIS OVER WITH YOUR ‘TIOGA-EM-
"DEVENS MILLING CO.
Feeds Manufactured by
TIOGA-EMPIRE FEED MILLS, Inc.
~- WAVERLY, N. Y.
is. probably very
give you full details and
KUNKLE, PENNA.
plied to quite jan extent through the
grown extensively throughout the corn
| belt—consequently, it was necessary |
| for the protein to be shipped into ‘the:
a TR TT
with ‘proper minerals, has given fully
as good or better results with dairy
cattle than linseed oil meal or cot-
tonseed meal. As a supplement to
grain for beef cattle, soy bean oil
meal has been doing a splendid job
and has produced beef very economi-
cally, and at the same time added a
beautiful gloss to the coats of the
cattle. :
As a supplement to grain for, hogs,
soy bean oil meal, properly mineraliz-
ed has produced very economical pork,
has produced good quality pork and
has produced rapid gains upon these
hogs.
As a feed for poultry, several of
the experiment stations have obtained
splendid results with soy bean «il
meal that has ‘been properly miner- |
~ “Feeders in the future consequently |
will ~ undoubtedly be able to supple-
ment their farm grains more economi-
cally, provided the corn belt farmers,
who have been the great producers of
soy beans, continue to use soy bean
in their crop rotation. The oil which
is extracted from the bean is also be-
ing used in a great many ways and
will undoubtedly have an influence up-
on the cost of many things which they
buy, such as paint, and will thereby
be a source of economy to farmers in
this great corn belt area. Feeders,
therefore, will do well to become thor-
oughly informed upon the desirability
of using soy bean products such as
soy bean oil meal, properly mineraliz-
ed, in the building of their ration for
alized as a supplement to farm grains.
farm animals.
TNID you ever prepare a pump-
kin? If you did, you'll re-
member it. First you had to open
it and remove the seeds; then you
cut it in sections and pared it;
and then you steamed it and then
you mashed At. Finally, with a
sigh, you realized that you and
it were all ready to start.
Now It’s Different ’
Nowadays, however, the fluffy
pumpkin pulp is put, in gold
enamel lined cans which preserve
its rich color, and all you have
to do is to open the can and be-
gin. So here is a suggestion for
an easily made pumpkin pie, now
that all that arduous work of pre-
paring the pumpkin ‘has been
eliminated.
Individual Cocoanut Pumpkin
Pies: Add one teaspoon ginger.
| Pumpkin Preparedness
| Heat mixture
three-fourths teaspoon cinnamon
and one-half teaspoon ‘salt to
three-fourths cup sugar, and stir
into one and one-half cup§ canned
pumpkin. Add two tablespoons
molasses and two tablespoons
melted butter. Add two beaten
eggs and two cups scalded milk.
in double boiler
until just hot, then pour into in-
dividual pastry-lined pie tins a
little bigger than small tart tins.
Bake until set, having the oven
425° for the” first five minutes,
then 325° for the remaining time.
Cool. Cover with sweetened
whipped crean?, and sprinkle top
thickly with cocoanut which has
been lightly browned in the oven.
This recipe will serve eight
people unless (which is very prob-
able) some of them want two pies.*
HEN Uncle Sam. sits down to
dinner in a New York hotel,
he can eat corn grown in Illinois,
and he can eat Boston baked
beans when he dines in Denver.
This wide choice of foods is not
possible in most countries, how-
ever. When Benito Mussolini
promulgated his edict that the
agricultural population of Italy
must remain on its farms, he took
into account the fact that in Italy
the canning business is small and
most of the canned food is ex-
ported.
Canning Saves Lives
The same condition would exist
here if canning were suddenly to
cease. There would be a rush
from the city to the farm. How
hdequately, however, modern can-
ning methods preserve the fun-
Our Bounteous Table
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
(Coneinued from Page 2) |
tions are at least appreciated; that
condition being equality. The recour-
ses to an arbitrary standard of equal-
ity, which will compel all nations to
conform to it has also proven a fail-
ure, It means that some nations re-
presented at the conclave will be oblig-
ed to make certain sacrifices. A sacri-
fice of some assumed right is offensive
to national pride. National pride is,
of course, the foundation upon which
is built the wall of political national-
ism. Political nationalism makes na-
tional people want nations.
in turn contribute to the inequality of
the human race.
Nations
Metaphysics has’ always recognized
the equality “of man. It continually
expounds that the essence of- Soul,
which makes man a living being as
pdistingmished from a living machine,
'is of Divine origin; that all men of all
social cast are possessed of a ‘Soul;
that the Soul, being of a Divine ori-
| gin, is not within the control/or do-
mination of man’s will. No ‘matter
how steeped in sin man beconles, he
can not cast his Soul into .the same
mire. Therefore, the Soul in all men
[is ot Infinite goodness; the Souls of
men are equal; the equality of man,
therefore, is the outer inequality * of
man; we see it constantly around us.
We classify the cariations of inequal-
lity in many ways, such as rich and
| poor, intelligent and ignorant, proud
{ and humble, /strong and weak, ete. It
weulq seem to be an ‘impossible task
to reconcile these differences, to bring
them to an equal basis. We, of course
» can imagine the obvious advantages
of equalityy to the human race, For
{ instance,
| understanding of all - problems facing
it would result in a common
‘|| the solution of any outstanding prob-
|
{lem; it would also mean the elimina-
! tion of racial and national prejudices.
| To these, of course, would be
the elimination of all associated vices,
which cling tenaciously to hatreds of
The
of mankind would result not in retro-
It would
any kind. mutual understand-
gression, as, some believe.
do away with the impelling urge of
competition, that is true, but it woud
substitute a unified desire to advance
alike. The advance would be free of
the selfish desire to keep its attendant
advantages fenced in by a political
boundry line from the rest of the
world. \ \
Every student of TRosicrucianism
realizes that the Soul of man is the
Intelligence of God; that it prevades
added !
all mankind alike. Infinite Intelligence
is the directing force of the universe.
{It has the answer to man’s oft asked
question: “Why am I?” If man turns
to this force resident in .his inner be-
is. He also learns why all men are;
he shorns himself of his outer canity,
bigotry and suspicion; he learns that
of appreciation of the Soul conscious-
ness within. |
The greater the spiritual develop=
ment of the individual, the greater he
more he sems to.understand his fellow
men. The farther man goes within
himself, the closer he becomes to man~
kind.
that he is. The Infinite Essence, that
gives life to man is man, made man,
| 5
{man goes on; that which man assum-
y
| Therefore, the glorification of that
: 3 | 4
races, of all degrees of intelligence and which is- not part of man is false, and
| proves its falsity when man must for-
sake it. If all men could come to know
Gr 7
| this, they would appreciate the intil- i
ity of the material and the physical
execut as a stepping stone. wr
integral parts, the humans,
other by knowing.
By knowing themselves,
| they come to understand the sympa~
| thetic_bond between them; namely,
[the Coul‘force or Infinite Intelligence.
i The most powerful nation in the world
lis the weakest if it has gained its su-
| premacy by the exercise of its. mater-
{ial influence, for that very mental’ at-
i other, their
[must know each
| themselves.
titude in its people, in their. character,
in their personality, will cause even- x
tually internal disruption.
| The nation composed of materialists
| alone, will tear itself assunder, as the
individual continues in the display of
his greed, intolerance, and attempt for
| material power. The more men and
women who ‘become independent think-
ers and students of their inner forces
land live accordingly, as they
stand the dictates if the Cosmic In-
{ telligence, the sooner will there be an
l equality of men and nations. I am
under-
| proud to say that in San Jose, Cali-
| fornia, the Grand Lodge of the Rosi*
| crucians (AMORC) is aiding thous-
| ands yearly to form this concept.
| If all the people would only realize
| \
! that the thoughts they think constant+
|1y create conditions, how careful they
| would be to think only those thoughts:
| that are of a constructive,
The humam
and successful nature.
| family as a whole create the condi-
| .
| tions in which they live, and if we
| and act in such manner as #sAbe at-
{tuned to peace. ire ed
| Edward Tischler. “I,
damentals found ‘in fresh foods
is explained by Dr. Daniel E.
Hodgélon, D.Sc., LL.D. in the fol-
lowing statement:
“We have discovered that
canned vegetables and fruits con-
tain many of the rich and useful
mineral salts which are funda-
mental in. the life processes.
Canned vegetables and fruits re-
tain much of their vitamin con-
tent, and, in fact, some of them are
quite as rich in this respect as
fresh vegetables and fruits. This
has been so well recognized by
men of science and by medical
men that recommendation has
been made by them for the use
of certain fruit juices from canned
vegetablds as a means of supply-
ing babies with the vitamin C
and the vitamin E. This is espe-
cially true of the canned tomato.”*
Dairy &
Harvey’s Lake
3102
Just Real Good Feed
“ALGRAIN'’
FEEDS
'ALLEN’S MILLS
ALDERSON
Telephones
Poultry
Muhlenburg
‘14-R-61
ing, he comes to knqw, and understand
his place in the universe, and why he
differences in men’ lie in their degree
heeds the voice of the Self within, the
He knows all that man is, is
|ed to make himself, he leaves behind.
Before nations can comprehend each
healthful
| want peace, must hold such though¥s