HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1950-11-16, Page 2Moo -o -o -d Music—Farmer Aini Miller uses a bugle to call in his cows for milking. Miller says
his musically inclined bovines respond to any instrument, to the extent of swaying and occa-
sionally executing a tricky, four -footed dance step. Their favorite song is probably the "Co*
Cow Boogie."
THEFAIThI FONT
Joh
In a recent issue of Country
Gentleman, a very interesting article
by Thomas Mulford tells of some
test which would seen' to prove,
beyond the shadow of a doubt, the
amazing value of built-up litter for
poultry. This is a subject I have
written about previously in this
colunin, and will probably be writ-
ing about again in the future; for
it really neems as if, in the past,
a whole lot of poultry raisers have
been doing a whole lot of unneces-
sary work.
8 8 8
One series of tests was made by
Dwight C. Kennard of Wooster.
They were conducted over a 7 -year
period, and have made Mr. Ken-
nard a strong advocate for the
built-up litter idea. On fresh litter,
pullets getting no animal protein
laid eggs of 32 per cent hatch-
ability. 00 old litter, pullets on the
same diet laid eggs of 78 per cent
hatchability. PIainly, old litter was
giving the pullets something almost
as good as the scarce and costly
meat, fish and milk by-products
they weren't getting.
* :5 L
When Kennard gave pullets
ample dried whey and meat scraps,
hatchability- was the sante-80 per
Bent—whether they were on fresh
Sitter or used titter. A complete
ration pushed the importance of
built-up litter back to the obvious
saving of work and litter cost. But
wherever the diet skimped on the
expensive animal ingredients, the
chickens made up much of the dif-
ference from the litter.
r * *
Kennard and his associates set
out to see what built-up litter had
Ea offer to growing chickens. In
four years they used 25,000 birds,
including Reds, New Hampshires,
Leghorns and Leghorn-R.I. Red
crossbreds on fresh litter removed
and renewed each two weeks, new
built-up litter and old built-up `litter.
The old litter invariably made the
best growth with lowest mortality.
Indeed, it is hard to find fresh litter
at Wooster any more except in an
occasional test pen, for most of the
3000 layers and the 5000 chicks
have inherited their littee, in some
eases from fourteen previous flocks.
* * e
, "For a moderate, natural growth
—not trying to match the forced
growth given by special broiler feeds
—you can raise chickens on an all.
plant diet," Kennard concludes,
"and get you satisfactory growth
and egg laying, by depending on
built-up litter."
As good examples of eggproduc-
lion, he Iikes to show some 40 -
bird pens „f bright-eyed, crimson-.
comber' Leghorn-R,I. Red crosses
that, by u=uai dietary standards,
have never had a chance.. They were
iced indoers (on old litter), never
ease a range, never consumed any
e'f the animal feedstuffs that pro-
vide Vitamin B, but front day-old
had an all -plant diet with Vitamin
A and D feeding oil. Their ration
provided 17 per cent protein, as
needed by layers, but it was vege-
table protein. They never had the
shaggy, rough -feathered look fre-
quent in indoor birds. They aver-
aged 220 eggs a year. Their sisters
in another pen had the same mash,
with whole wheat tossed into the
built-up litter. This pulled the total
protein content down to 12 or 13
per cent. But they scratched and
picked busily in the litter, and they
also averaged 220 eggs.
*
Exactly what do chickens get
from the built-up litter? According
to Professor Kennard's demonstra-
tions, they get the animal protein
factor (s), which is not a protein
but a vitamin. The (s) is because
scientists are still discovering angles
of the factor or factors. An animal
protein factor is a vitamin of the
B group. Riboflavin is one of these
B vitamins. You find riboflavin in
the expensive animal protein; milk
and fish are rich with it, and meat
scraps afford considerable. A cow
creates riboflavin during digestion,
and pigs and chickens go to cow
manure for the 13 vitamin. When
Litter is "built-up," meaning when
it has gone through all the pro-
cesses of a compost heap, it is rich
in animal protein. The protein enters
the litter in the droppings, Then
in a"lnysterious way it synthesizes
or builds itself up, through the
composting period which Kennard
describes as`a purification—from an
original 8 or 9 per cent of protein
to 25 per cent protein. The oldest
litter has the highest protein, he
says.
n *
Scientists have measured how
fast riboflavin increases in chicken
droppings at room temperature.
Fresh droppings contain about as
much riboflavin as is found in the
chicken's feed. In 24 hours, the
riboflavin doubles. In a week, it
quadruples. Why is that Beneficial
bacteria do the work, scientists say.
* 8 :
Looking at the results of all his
tests, Kennard brings up the. ques-
tion: what is sanitation anyhow?
Ideas of sanitation change. Ken-
nard believed, through years se a
practical poultryman before he be-
came an experimenter, that sanita-
tion was what the housewife thinks
it is, something spotless and anti-
septic. Now he says, "As a cleaner
and purifier, Nature beats anything
you can do with a scrubbing brush
or a broom. A good" gardener
makes a compost pili,_ He knows
he can bury in it airelilfids of ob-
noxious wastes, and-i1T3tKre's'ehem-
istry and biology will ptirify thnnt.
* * 0,
"Pollution," he adds, ''is what
you have with fresh droppings on
fresh litter. That is because the
fresh litter doesn't hold the sans -
BIG MONEY FIGHTS
!Winner Loser - Data Place • Gate Receipts
Gene Ionia, ,hick Mimeses Sept, 22, 13:; (:htcago 81,160,090
Jon I.00ls Wily Genn Juno 10, 104" New.1'orh - 1,025,000
Ilene 'funned ,Jack Dempsey Sept. 23, 1026 19dfa., I'll. 1,800,000
.Carl, Demo". renrgea Cnrp,ni:rr July 2, 1921 Jerse' (11, 1,020,580
Jack Demme. ' nuts Fine Sept. 14, 1923 New York 1,820,000
Joe LOUIS thu Ilacr Sept. 24. 1036 Now York 948,962
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Karry 1{'111', IeulN Igloo Sept. 11, 19",.1 Israey ('i, 4112,800
Denny T,o05:r 1 Loco Teuller July 23, 1923 lkaw York 162,941
,heft D,m,s,'• Imo Willard ((915 4, 1030 Toledo 482,422
Jou Louts 11111y Conn ,Ione t0, 1941. New Yore est,'/44
Luta Vireo sreas Willard Jnly 12. 1023 raraenOlts 414,280
Jack Sharkey Max Sri:meting Juno It, 1022 'vow 'York 4211,000
RAeita (trtuhm . 'Cony Zalo July 18, 1047 Chicago 425,918
Slav Barr Primo c se,a'rn June 1.4, 1034 Few Yori, 417,030
Harry Wills Charley We1n,r1. Only 2, 1025. 'Sew York 400,000
Joe Lopis Iso Waleott, Dec. 5. 1041 :CM York 210,497
tary agencies that take care of pol-
lution. In built-up litter the fresh
droppings are diluted many times
and surrounded by composting
microorganisms that go right to
work,"
4 , fir
Wooster figures show that in
recent years, with built-up litter,
mortality froin all causes has drop-
ped front 19 per cent to a little over
5 per cent, No remedies are used.
Coccidiosis has virtually- disappear-
ed, says Kennard. His. first brood
on built-up litter had 15 per cent
mortality. The next brood on the
same Utter lost 10 per cent. The
next 12 broods on the sante litter
had 5 per cent mortality,
k .. 0
Built-up litter begins to be good,
Kennard has found, just when some
people quit and clean out the
house—at about six months, He ob-
jects t0 the. terns, deep litter. This
term reveals a misunderstanding,
because stere depth of fresh shav-
ings or straw lacks those sanitary
organisms that need time to build
up in a compost pile,
e
How should built-up litter be
managed? "Start with about four
inches of easy -to -stir litter. Straw
is hard to stir, unless it is chopped.
Stirring isn't needed in wvartll
months, but it must be done in the
damp, cold months. Put on an-
other inch or two of litter when
otherwise you'd clean—when the
litter gets damp, caked or pasty.
Maybe you'll put on Iinse and litter
together. Ten to 15 pounds of
hydrated lime to 100 square feet
of floor is about right.
k
* a
"If you put on lime, stir it in.
This prevents some burning of the
chickens' feet, Build the litter up
to at least 8 inches, Go as much
deeper as convenient. When the lit-
ter starts to cake or paste over the
surface, stir it. Otherwise you have
caked droppings, and that isn't a
sanitary condition. The caked :nat-
ter should go into other material to
'digest' it. The most valuable, pul-
verized material in built-up litter is
the oldest; next to the floor.
* Y ,1
"You need ventilation and stir-
ring if the ammonia in the house
stings your eyes. It can irritate the
chickens' eyes' too.
'0 k ,r
"\When you put day-old chicks on
built-up litter, it's good to put two
or three inches of fresh litter under
the brooder. Otherwise too much
ammonia might be released up into
the hover by the heat,
"Lisle helps to keep the litter in
a looser, more friable condition—
more absorbent.
"When you clean the house, just
to keep the litter it bounds, clean
out whatever part is easiest and
1031(1 off the rest. But never leave
less than 6 to 8 inches."
Usually after a year or so, no.
new litter is added in the Wooster
houses. Only removals are made,
the litter being, as Dwight Ken-
nard puts it, self-contained. Last
summer the oldest litter looked soft,
black and dusty—much like black
Midwest soil in dry time—with oc-
casional pieces of shavings or cobs.
I heard visitors ask: "What do you
use for litter here—dirt?" They also
remarked on the lack of strong
odor in the houses.
Professor Kennard summed up
sanitation in the following words:
"If it )slakes you feel better to take
down cobwebs, go ahead, Other-
wise, all the sanitation a poultry-
man needs besides his built-up lit-
ter is to spray the roosting quarters
onee a year with creosote."
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ISSUE 46 — 1950
br/ SLxg1C��l 1C
Now there once was a time when
we rather prided ourself on keeping
more er less up-to-date in our read-
ing. But that was in the cling and
distant past, Nowadays, either the
gush of printed matter from the
world's presses has increased so
greatly, or else our capacity for
swallowing sante has narrowed
down so much, that we find it :about
all we can do to stay abreast of
latest developments in the Marathon
chase of noble Pick Tracy after
that dirty dastard T. V. Wiggles.
* a *
So if we ever get around to read-
ing a book within a couple of years
after it hits the bargain table in the
bookshops, we think we are doing
right smartly. Thus we were not a
little surprised to notice—after we
had finished reading it 'nvitlt keen
enjoyment—that a volume titled
"THE BIG FIGHTS", edited by
Harold Meyers, bore the copyright
date of 1950.
That is sho• wing a rare burst of
speed—for ns. And we hasten to
recommend the book to anyone in-
terested in real fisticutling; or real
sports reporting; or both,
,k 0 0
For although the copyright is
recent, the matter the book contains
is not. Not to make too much of a
mystery of it, the contents consist
of the stories of 26 of the most
famous prize -ring Urassl., as told
by I11111 who were actually on the
spot—suets then as Dan Parker,
"Tad" Dorgan, Damon Runyon,
and "Bugs" Baer, to mention just
a few.
a e *
Our chief reaction—all high-class
book reviewers have to use the
word "reaction" at least once per
column—was what a raft of truth
there is in that old saying about
"distance lends enchantment" etc,
How different, we thought, are
these on -the -spot stories front what
the saute writers would probably
cook up if they were turning them
out now, How much less glamour-
ous some of those old-time ring
figures appear, as seen in action
close-up, than they do when their
"life stories" appear on the silver
screen or in the pages of some slick -
paper magazine.
* 't '5
(Here we might say that we
know what we are talking about,
having done a spot or two of lily -
gilding in our time. Seems to us
that, not so long ago, we did a piece
on the Dempsey-Firpo affair that
might have sounded a mote more
exciting than it actually was—but,
No, nobody could artificially height-
en the thrills of that one!)
k
* ,k
But to get back to the book. At
all probability no fighter has been
the subject of more of the aforesaid
"glanlourizing" than Jack Dempsey.
Just this year, in a poll of sports-
writers to decide who was the great-
est fighter of the last 50 years,
Dempsey got 251 votes; Joe Lewis
104; and Tunney, who beat Demp-
sey twice, a there 6. So let's see how
the great Manassa Mauler actually
appeared to a ringsider—the noted
sports authority Bill Coram, no
less,
5, * 'k
The story starts with an intro-
duction which explains that Demp-
sey, although he promised he would
be a "fighting champion", only de-
fended itis title 5 times in the 7
years after he won it. The New
York Boxing Commission scanted
him to fight his most persistent
challenger, Harry Wills, but Demp-
sey and his managemetit seemed to
want no part of Mr. Wills. They
preferred Gene Tunney, and as the
N.Y. folks wouldn't stand for that,
the match was taken to Phila-
delphia. And now for h few quotes
from Mr. Corulli s story as it ap-
peared in the N.Y. Journal next
day.
Y' & ,k
"While 135,000 sat in a rain that
beat straight down, the Tiger Man
turned tante cat and held out his
jaw for a licking,"
m 4
"Theworld has been led to be-
lieve that when Dempsey, the man
mauler of Manassa, the cruel, sav-
age, primal Iran, went down, he
would go down fighting, with every
gun he carried roaring away, a
champion to the end, No such thing
happened in that strangely quiet,
rain -soaked bowl last night,"
k * '5
"This was a stranger, this fellow
who wandered aimlessly around a
rain -pelted ring after' Tunney. A
. Tiger Mata with no tiger in hint, A
poor excuse for a heavyweight
champion of the world, which he
was until a few short hours ago."
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gan.
"The fight begins, Dempsey
rushes Tunney back into his own
corner. For a moment it looks like
it's going to be the same old story.
Suddenly the Marine slashes a right
to the head. A man somewhere be-
hind us, but near the ringside,
laughs, a taunting, mocking .laugh.
'Don't hold, Dempsey, Don't give
up: he screeched in a voice that
could have been heard for miles,
That is. the only sound in the
stadium. Sure enough, Dempsey is
holding."
* * 0
"It was the begln,ing of the end.
Those three little red, white and
blue ribbons at his belt, which
Dempsey had cherished, were faded
auil bedraggled. So was their wear-
er."
k 5 :r
We could go on and on, quoting
from the description, not only of
this fight, but plenty of others. But
we mustn't spoil your enjoyment.
Get a copy for yourself. You're
hound to get a Kick out of it, even
if you do discover that some of
your ring idols had feet that were
somewhat clay -like. We can only
add that, breaking the invariable
custom of Union book reviewers,
we purchased and paid cash for the
volume under discussion. Two -bits,
to be exact, and worth every penny
of it many times over.
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SELL Popular 23 fire extinguisher whole -
solo or direct. Liberal Orofit0 exclusive.
territory. FIRE-RILL1011 , 6042 Roslyn.
Ave., OtOntreal.
WANTED
WANTED—Flocks to supply a large hatch-
ery will, hatching eggs. plocks culled
and bloodtested free of charge. High guar-
anteed premium paid. And some breeds
can take eggs the year round. Apply Box
No. 03, 123 -15th St., New Toronto,
WANTED to purchase, pullets all ages
and breeds/. Apply /Mx 04, 123 -18th
Street, New Toronto, Ontario.
PA111R0hiWife nail 1 vhmtl wish to rent
about 100 -acre fart,,, Guarantee to improve
property. 'Would consider going concern.
Reply to D. O'Brien, 341 Pane Avenue,
Toronto.
Tender, Aching
Ihrigng Feet
Your reel nosy 00 0o swollen and ire
flamed that you think you can't go an.
Other Sten your sines may feel as If they
are cutting right Into rho flesh. You feel,
oleic all over with the pain and torture!
You'd give anything to gel relief
Two or three ,,pouch tions of Moono's
Emerald 011 and in a fee minutes rho 0010
and soreness dl,appente.
No 001(1er how dtaennrnged you have
been, if you ha vo not tried Emerald 011
then 5011 have something to learn. Cel a
hnlne hone nl nil druggists.
78„rIlniegy
qQuta
Greaseless,
fast -dr it,
no strong odoc.
rcooemlcei also 69c