The Commerce Journal. (Commerce, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 27, Ed. 1 Friday, July 6, 1923 Page: 3 of 8
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THt
TEXAS, JULY 9, 1923
S s OCK
Daily Rations for Draft
Lxper>miuial
"A GIRL!”
•hs
'I
ecstatically
a« shall shake the British
came
I
be $12, he declared.
and Mr.
"Ob, ain’t it
Inquired Tuppence
case |s
I
i
turned
e
com-
State
Fire
no
more.
A
the
green
CHAPTER IV—Continued.
10
The
There
the
U,
State Tax Commissioner
i
on his head.
laughed
softly, as
CHAPTER V
round
■
It
toward the hoy and dropped her tolce- Hn'1 ,hat’ taken In
ID
suddenly
Tuppence
three-penny detective
fs*ta a day.
4
*■
I
L
1
ur
M
a
I
An official denial
be forthcoming if
A Crash-
on Hie Head
well that
frequently
tlents.
enviously.
Rood job, this tee
during the
I an
Deputy Came, Fish and
missioner.
an
year.
that she
being
Ing from Albert's pocket,
MaAl* „•__
--— e« - v
her that her s—
to the bait,
detective force!”
Just like the
—....! as how
Willacy
tax vab
and the
»■
•ry
dll
no
hl
There are thir-
the summer sen-
weekly meetings
> programs.
law
oi;
pen
lire
They «re honest
their value to ur.
yoa cannot make
out lx»ne«t men.
populace la infallible.”
repeated.
proved It yet
pro-
Skim milk tankage,
men] are all good to
summaries of the
-------.1 unions before
- ------a Is most satlsfac-
the rall-
wlth the
Ing Blow Descended c:
snd All Was Darkness.
'•rashing blow descended i
and all was darkness.
Oyster Commissioner, C-7-
Will station deputies in airfishing
tncts under the new law prohibiting
| tnxi oexlvs r*9 X.« ... ■
in thirty-eight counties and
districts two deputies will be
to see that the law is not violated.
W. W „Boyd' State Game, Kish and
, says that bo
die-
lant tones.
the loan to
have arranged the details
rily, Borin’"
“I think so?"
"That Is good.
from Moscow win
I necessary."
There was a pause, and then the
broke the
parlormaid. ;
Many’s the time
me: ‘Mark
are about three
J Unless tfijg |t
suckling
, ..... -----average daily ra-
tion of 3.u8 f—----- *
pounds of hay, in addition
*
College of Agriculture
That
weight
and which did 4.8 hours
age farm work, r;^.
daily ration of 14.91
and 17.12 pounds of
That brood t"---——
. dently for farm i7“2,
i feed required by them
I *Ieatar 0,aD U>e lost of feed remind
I them are subject t.
nail, and glasses that _.
are soon broken; such
name once l
tncts under the new law ______...
the sale of bass, crappie and satfiah
i . - - --------——J in some
on duty
"hr what tn do next?
steps to the entrance
mansions, it Wflf, now
i small lift-boy, who was
and whistling
F<mm| dpa| (,f
amount of ac-
■
"That Is true.
Inkling that we
our own ends.
... Is
It Is curious—but
a revolution wfth-
The Instinct of the
He paused,
ns though the
"Every revolu-
-1 men. They I
soon disposed of afterward.”’
...J was a sinister note In his
a word of
suddenly. “I
put you wise,
real
What’s
drill four wells c_ :t_ Z
Hl Denver Kailroad right c.‘
the Electra field in Wichita
Adjoining leaseholders are
the early days of the
ence $p Tuppence's c*
the fact that she had
nlng In some flowers
before.
*yea, and had noted the
three-penny detective novel
»Jdta^«i’b*rt' poPkw' ■n<’ tb* ’»■
”^-“,8r*wnent <* hl. eyes told________
--—1 wara BM I —Bishop hIr*
“Foe the first time
felt afraid."
total is $73,141,150,
$513,582 over last
values are based rr
•«e Seven corporations
creases over last year and t
decreased, all the others being
same.
J- D. Fonntleroy. State
Engineer, has been tpp„;„lcu
•>er of the executive committee
has certified the intangible
ties to the various counties
Increase of
Intangible
on a five-year aver-
-------j showed In-
two have
; th.
of corn, J"'
292.9 pounds
colts In g„od
weaning time until they
on pasture.
That 15 pounds of
pounds oat straw, fed
grain la a cz“z'
horses doing light
winter months.
Again the Russian's fingers drummed
on the table.
“To the point u.
given to understand
certain document In
assured success."
If that document were
—leaders, the result
They would
throughout Eng-
for the revolution
a moment's hesitation. The
finally
The Secret Adversary
|| By AGATHA CHRISTIE II
- || Dodd M^ 4 Comp.n,) II
j lature, limiting the working hours
female employes at nine hours j--.,
or day in certain lines of business, does’
not apply to county officers, accord-J
Ing to an opinion given by the Attor-l
j ney General’s Department to Labor
Commissioner J. 8. Myers.
Cowpeas With Com Will
Cheapen Pork Production
Besides the Immediate benefits of
cowpeas with com and
pork production, there is
In labor of harvesting the
—“ soil is increased | C . Z...
™a,,er bein« the bin Parsed
session of the Legislature cl
the name of the Department
Burance and
Commissioner of Insurance,
comes effective Sept. 12. o
hry of the Commisser of Insurance
$4,000.
st Tuppence’s
was a certain amount
.— .... t In the girl; at
got on well
Economical Production
of Pork Depends on Grass
Economical pork production depends
upon plenty of good pasture during the
summer jnontha, both for the pig. and
*',d 8owa' and also upon seeing to
it that not only the sows, hut also the
Pte*, ore constantly supplied with .
well balanced ration.
The Railroad Commission will hold
a hearing soon to consider the appli-
cation of Greenwood and Burnett to
drill four wells on the Fort Wortb
I A Denver Railroad right of way in
the Electra field in Wichita County,
contesting
my friend. I was
that there was a
existence which
ITO BE CONTINUED »
Good Name Beyond Prtoe.
Garments that have once one rent in
I to be »orn on every
. .-----* *r* once cracked
Is man's good
sow should re-
. . , 24 to .’if, hours.
Ing given only lukewarm water. She
a small amount >rf
W. C. Burns, who was assistant
manager of the Texas Compensation
and seven of the
-J to Austin to-
— -...1 files, to
division of the
Insurance Commission
------s compen-
1 bo
of Control baa
—J Continental
. —, Chicago,
vehicle seals, 300,-
plates, 12,000
------plates and
vehicle
cooled, he pre-
Clearly
ra-
posl-
go suddenly, the
-J almost certain
same Infinite
-----.• tactics,
a sigh of re-
rose to his feet,
bulldog tenacity
r to
the
so-called fifty-four-hour
passed by the Thirty-Fourth Leglsla-
remarked
approved hos
“getting
pounds of
fxounds of hay to pro-
i Bureau at Dallas,
j Banking and Insurance
partments. one of banking and
of insurance. The laws become
erative before then, but the t
propriations will not become
able until that date.
Tommy's In- I
of him,
'What
Gov. Neff has approved and filed
-J at the third called
> changing
-■—of ]n-
creating the oflce of
It be-
The sal-
Saw mills and nitroglycerine planta
“f® lo ,be required to observe the new
------------ , J to an-
ol Missouri | made by G. F. Simmous,
Oyster Com-
son. my brain's got busy
would it be If you mentioned
Ki't a young cousin, or a
yours had. that might suit
get me?"
said Albert Instantly.
much saving
crop, and j
"TIiat fa rather t
“I know. But It
principal Labor leaders,
not seem to Interfere too
must believe It to be
own show.”
The Russian
thougli amused.
“Yes. yes." he said.
They mtyxt have no |
j are using them for our own
men—and that
State Reclamation Engineer
A. Stiles left for Wichita Falls
sume marking the boundary
along Red River i:_ —
river near Bridgetown v. L
cated oil wells and where
Rangers were stationed
to prevent the incursion
There is a sharp conflict
— -----J in thia area.
• • •
£r” of Pb**T has bee
as Judge o.
— Court
It has been decided to put in oper-
ation on Sept. 1 the two recent acts
separating the State Department of
j Banking and Insurance into two de-
one
op-
new ap-'
j avail-
Regular turn-up, they ’ad."
dawning tn Tnp-
She thought a minute
lapped Albert on the
Arthur
i to re-
tine
He will go to the
—i where are lo-
■ J the Texas
at one time
--------of Oklahoma
claimants. Tt;.. :
In the boundary claims
Because of increasing literary Inter-
est among students at the summer
of Texas,
i writers’ sc-
an a.tive or-
“It seems sort of familiar to me.”
The sparklers belonged to him.
of emeralds In the
a million dollars!”
came ecstatically from
more like the pic-
era) fee.ling.-T. J. Maynard. Animal
Husbandry Department. Colorado Ag
rlcultural College.
IK*
/ >
• 1
r-
-
<ninus and llnweed men) nrp all pood tn lhe Scribblers’ Club,
supply bone-and-muscle-makfng ma-
teria! while com or barley may be used
liberally in combination with any of
the above mentioned feeds.
Good mothers with large litters will
U2U,”*te l“se fl*”*1*- despite the most 11b-
•ppotnted by Gov. Neff t ~
the recently created District
for Hidalgo county. Mr. Polk is a
graduate of the University of Texas
and the son of U J. Polk, fromer vice
president and general manager of the
Banta Fe system, and who is still
connected with that system la an of-
i I* capacity. Appointment of tbu
Judge of the new court had been tea-
dered by the Governor to Judge Hood
■oom but ho declined to accept.
&
•I
I
I
W ,£h a reaa,,nabl« amount of accuracy.
The Slim Felner was speaking. His
rich Irish voice was unmistakable:
"That's all very well. But more
money Is essential. No money—no
results!"
Another voice, which Tommy rather
thought was that of Boris replied:
“Will you guarantee that there are
results?"
In a month from now—sooner or
later as you wish—I will guarantee
you such a reign of terror in Ireland
— ------.1 empire to
Its foundations.”
Tliere was a’pause, and then
accents of Number
should then fed
feed for a day or so. Hnd the ration
can then be gradually Increased. The
bulky feeds used during pregnancy are
not m order now, for the gains secured
on the suckling pigs will be the most
efficient gains they will ever make.
The State Board
awarded contracts to the C
Metal Products Company,
for 700,000 motor 12"' ’
000 pairs of number pl-
pairs of dealers' license
100.000 commercial motor
seals, to be delivered next Septem-
ber and October tor use in 1924.
Milk for Pigs
Po^s^^‘mmeani,,kfIv^^
MW>mlcal feeding ration for growing
t.int.d ^j’uTi^s: i
the fertility of the
through all of the v.„
fIrrtHr’’0!. b"Ck 'ntO Tbe K*np,a'
fertility and productiveness of the land
will be materially Increased through a
' nt ’n coat of
and nuDitui matter.
Hp pauppd h
went on: “Where ig the
hut in the States
smart lad when
this about the girl
Ing?”
"Annie?
An idea was
pence's hraln.
or two. then
shoulder.
■ "See here.
How
that you’d
friend of J
the place. Y<»u
“I’m there,”
“You leave it to me. miss, and HI
fix the whole thing up in two ticks."
"Some Ind!” commented Tuppence.
«lth a nod of approval. “y„u iet me
know, nnd if It’s O. K. I’ll he round
tomorrow at eleven o’clock."
nm 1 to let you know to?”
Ritz." replied Tuppence laconically
•Name of Cowley."
Albert eyed her
"It must tie a
business."
“It sure I
“especlnlly when
hacks the bill.
goes well, you shall come In
Tuppence Enters Domestic Service
When Tommy set forth on the trail
of the two men. It took all Tuppence’s
self-command to refrain from accotn
panylng him. However, she contained
herself as best she might, consoled bv
the reflection that her reasoning hail
been justified by events. The two
men had undoubtedly <-ome from the
second floor flat, nnd that one slender
thread of the name “Ititn” hnd set
the Young Adventurers once more
upon the track of the abductors of
Jane Finn.
The question r
She retrace*I her
hall of the i
tenanted by n
polishing brass fittings,
the latest air with a
vigor and a reasonable
curacy.
He glanced
entry. There
of the gamin element I;,
all events, she invariably
wdth smnll boys.
“Well. Wlillam.” she
cheerfully. In the best cf
pltal-early-mornlng style,
good shine up?”
The boy grinned responsively.
Albert, miss," he corrected.
-etMnZhe’had^^r
munlcatlng door between the
Sn?". ’ef‘ ,h* w‘Ddow.
Carefully dosing the door into the
b*bl"d him. he stepped seroM
T1.J hoH " “nn ex,n,lned It closely.
The bolt was shot acroui it. it wan
vent rusty, and h.d dearly not be^n
XI B.v gently wrig-
gling it to and fro. Tommy managed
morh"W J’ b‘Ck w,tbout making too
T’Wn> h* hla
former maneuvers with the handle
dtai ""np,ete Tb*
bDf «““«>• fw Tommy to
°" *». te*.1** thte doer
*”*fpt>m bat
■e vm ewe to (BMaaine tbe votae
TT-.... =— ll»' x-xper.miutal unq t
1 *0Jk the L’nivws.ty
College of Agriculture shows:
That Qraft horses averaging
approximately i.goo pounds
— ——J h day aver-
required an average
pounds of gram
timothy hay.
mares may be used effi-
-J work, but the yearly
v — -.i la 26 per cent I
by gelding or "dry"' mareTdomg1"^
same work. 1
Ihct brood mares working and State Board of Education
nursing foals required 47 per cent ! ’
more grain and 32 per cent more bay • , - - ----
daily during the suckling period than *13 per taP‘ta» unless
i dry mares. textbook contracts c~z
That foala during the suckling ! the SuPrem® Court in the
period consumed
pounds of grain and 1.35
, , — ————i to their
mother's milk.
That draft colts consumed an aver-
age daily ration of 6.G8 pounds grain,
j from weaning
were turned in pas-
a period of 219
time they gained
weighed at tiie close
J pounds,
required 4.40
the soft, sibilant
One:
Good! You shall have the money.
Boris, you will see to that."
Boris asked a question:
' la the Irish Americans,
Potter, as usual?”
“I guess that'll be all right!” said a
new voice, with a transatlantic Into-
nation, “though I’d like to point out.
here and now, that things are getting
a mite difficult. There's not the sym-
pathy there was. and a growing dls-
isisltlon to let the Irish settle their
own affairs without interference from
America.*
Tommy felt that Boris had shrugged
bls shoulders as he answered- "Does
that matter, since the money only
nominally comes from the States’”
“The chief difficulty Is the landing
of the ammunition,” Kuh! the Sinn
Felner. "The money I, conveyed in
easily enough—thanks to our col-
league here."
• lP‘Ot_,R fhen>” the sibl-
“Now, In the matter of
an English newspa[»er. you
satlafacto-
a moment or two ~
,’,^,,rrsrd,^^r:Mh,m-
a dirty trick!”
As his Indignation
pared to face the situation
the first thing to be done was to
store the handle to Its original
tlon. It he let It g- -— - •
men Inside would be t'
to notice It, HO, with the r—-
pains, he reversed hla former
All went well, and with
lief the young man
There waa a certain
about Tommy that made him alow
admit defeat. Checkmated for t
moment, he was f.r from ahand<mlng
the conflict. He atm Intended
^bat was going on |n the locked
As one plan had failed, he
hunt about for another.
A little far-
But Tommy Hoard No Mora.
Ago to Waan Lambs.
Lambs should be weaned when they
or four months of age
’“,'r "
B¥NOPB«._Reallstag C_
naa a possible chance of
•svad. aa the Lusitania la sinking.
a *,r*n<er Slves a young American
Wlck*«a which he aaka her
to deliver to the American ambaa*
•a<lor fen«land. She ia aaved.
in London, former Ueut. ‘Tom-
Bere*f®rd and Mlaa Prudence
CowJey - Tuppence” - dfachariced
form an organisation.
Young Adventurers, Ltd.”
.ar* both br°k« and conae-
r •mentlj ready for unorthodox meth-
ods. They write out an advertise-
ment. Tuppence makee a business
Wh?.,mm.ent *'!h “ man’ R,war'’
Whittington, who offers her easy
•mployment. but on giving her
•• "Jane Finn.” wh|. h she
had heard on the street, Whitting-
ton dlaappeare. m answer to an
advertisement signed "Jane Finn"
"c**v» notes from "Mr.
£*7*re.,nd p Hershelm-
X *. , Garter, a high government
1 *’”?*‘a of * 'nys’crlou.
H,r„1.,r?Wn aa ,"'ad of ,he Bol-
shevik in England, and engages
the pair to find Jane Finn, whom
he Is seeking for important reasons
HerJhlf dav ,he [‘alr '■'■“a
Hershelrr.mer. American million-
aire He la looking for his cousin,
£ a”' W.h? ha'1 di“l’Pear.d
V*”" landing from the Btisltania's
boats, and employs them to search I
tor her. They discover a Mrs. Van- I
la * Lusitania survivor. I
Tuppence recognises Whittington In
a caller on Mrs. Vandemeyer
^v«yr„?’a^ h'm wb'ttlngton
fXa. hL^-n,e' H<-ridf">mer
wllm J I To">"» trails Boris.
J* hittington ■ companion, to a I
In Soho. He overhears de- I
tails of a Bolshevik and labor plot I
to overturn the government. I
then drew a deep breath, and
ever go slightly Inward.
Rot budge. Tommy waa annnved If
he had tn use too much force. It would
nmir.1, "r,a,n,J' Pre"k He waited
until th$» vnlcea
tried again. Ntlll nothing
He Increased the pressure,
beastly thing stuck?
pern tlon. he pushed
might. But the door
and nt Inst the truth dnwned r---
hlnv It was locked or bolted on the
inside.
For
State Superintendent Marrs said
mareg working and I ®la,e Board of Education will on
required 47 per cent i Au8 10 n"ake an apportionment for
per cent more buy 1 Jhe eD1,uiae year and that it will be
’ ” -J period tlian ^er lapita, unless the December
textbook contracts are held valid by
-----— j mandamus
case submitted, in which sveat it will
Now.
___ she i
"Albert be ft." s.ld Tup^nro. She m'nutei later she smiied’contem-
----------- X "f her !n the g1aw.
With an actress' pencil she had slight-
b altered the line of her eyebrows.
, — -' conjunction with
the new luxuriant growth of f„fr ilaIr
f) 7 rhan‘!ed h" appearance that
»he fell confident that even If she
™me face to fncF w,th WhIttlngton
he would not recognize her. From
hospital experience she knew only too
a nurse out of uniform Is
unrecognized by her pa-
Highway
appointed mem-
— vs-g-x* of th®
American Association of State High-
way Officials. He has also been ap-
pointed chairman of the program com-
mittee for the December meetiug of
— ... the American Association of State
cheapening Highway Officials, to be held in New
! Orleans.
must I
He looked round him.
ther along the passage „B tlle
was a second door. He slipped sllentlv
» He "MenM '«”■ • moment
or two, then tried the handle
yielded, and be slipped inside.
The room, which was untenanted
was furnished „ . bedroom "uu
everything ei,e in the house, thertr
■"yfhlng. more abundant
But what Interested Tommy was
be bad b«Ped to And. a com.
two
1*. drawled Tuppence,
old man Rysdnie
Tf thi. B,,t don’t frM- ",,n-
If this goes well, you shall come In
on the ground floor."
With which promise she took leave
of her new ally, and walked briskly
sway from South Audley mansions,
well pleased with her morning's work
She went straight back to the Ritz
and wrote a few brief words to Mr.
arter. Having dispatched this, and
wh^h'nh"T'ne vet w'"me<l-
whlch did not surprise her-she start-
ed off on a shopping expedition. Start-
ing with a cheap clothing store, and
passing through one or two second-
hand establishments, she had finished
the day at a well-known hairdresser's.
in the seclusion of her bedroom
unwrapped that final purchase’
certainly creak.
«** a little, then he
happened.
Had the
Finally, |n des-
wlth all his
remained finn.
U[>on
ami then repeated,
phrase pleased him: "l
tlon has hnd Its honest
i are i---- ~
There
! voice.
Tlie f^rrnnn remimed: ‘Tlyme* must
ro. He Is too far seefnz. Number
Fourteen will see to that."
2"b*r<’ w*as a hoarse murmur,
Thnt s all right, guv'nor." And
then after a moment or two; “Sunnose
I’m nabbed." appose
. T. ’L”' ,h,‘ bMt '“T"1 '"lent
to defend you.” replied the German
quietly. But In any case you will
wear gloves fitted with the finger-
prints of a notorious housebreaker
You have little to fear."
“Oh. I ain’t afraid, guv’nor. All
for tbe good of the cause. The
streets Is going to run with blood, so
’Poke w,tb " rel-
l»h. -Dreams of It. sometimes. I
does. And diamonds' and pearls roll-
~ n ,he gntfer ,or "fyo®* to
pick up!
Tommy heard a chair shifted. Then
Number One spoke: “Then all is ,r-
*r* nf
B"‘ ,be German
■poke with less than his usual confi-
wncc.
Number One's voice held
a dangerons quality;
“What has gone wrong?"
“Nothing; but—”
“But what?"
"The Labor leaders. Without them
m you say. we can do nothing, n
on'the "eC,‘re " 'WWral afrtke
on the 29th—*
“Why should they not?*
lAnd’1»>Te/a,<’1 the7-r* bd""a»-
who,e' pBh’te
But we're after her.
I duced a long-drawn-out
She won't get away with the
this time."
utter*<1 another ejaculation
indicative of delight.
‘ Mind you. sonny, not
this. said Tuppence
guess I oughtn’t to have
we know a
we see one.
— I you say Is leav-
ground oats, mid- acssion of the University
defy, is continuing as i
ganization this summer for the first
time in its history. —
ty-flve students of
aion attending the
and taking part in the
i force have been moved tc 2
a grain ration com- become"of The r<*S aD<i
parts oats, I “
which is to make workmen's ,
sat ion rates under the law which
came effective June 13.
“That Is so. l: -
placed Itefore the 1
would be Immediate,
publish It broadcast
land, and declare
without r -------
Kovernment would be broken
and completely."
Then what more do you want’”
'The document Itself," said the Ger
man bluntly.
Ah! It is not In your possession?
^now where It Ig?”
Does anyone know where It is?”
“One person—perhaps. And we are
not sure of that even."
Mho Is that person’”
“A girl.”
Tommy held his breath.
'A girl?” The Russian's voice ro«e
contemptuously. "And you have no, ;
made her speak? In Russia we have
wajs of making a girl talk"
"•lids case Is different,”’ said the
f.ennon sullenly.
“How—different?”
moment, then
Klrl now*'
"The girl?"
"She is—"
But Tommy heard
After listening Intently for a mln-
nte or two. he nut his head round the
curtain. The passage was deserted
Tommy bent down and removed his
■hoes then. leaving them behind the
cilia n. be walked gingerly out on his
■tocklngwl feet, and kneeling down
by the closed door, he laid his ear
cautiously to the crack. To hl. In-
tense annoyance he could distinguish
InL .k"1"".; ,U'i, " Ch’nP<‘ b-re
•nd there If a voice was raised, which
*° Whe' b,a curiosity
rtfil farther. J
He eyed the handle of the door ten
tatlvely. Could he turn It by degrees
so gently and Imperceptibly that those
In the room would notice nothing’ He : - - -
Echini that w!th great care R co"d <X'e”“>n"'
« *’“’r,’r' * Action of
wLJr* * Mme' b* mnrw< It round
holding hl. breath In hl. exceaslve
wm’ A .I "'* Httle more
■till—would It never be finished? Ah!
•t last It wnul<| turn no farther.
- “ tor • minute or two.
—.1 pressed It
The door did
annoyed.
LIV€ 'pODdansafl AusIId ltrs
glanced mysteriously round the hall
The effect was purposely a hrosd one
In case Albert should mlas It. .She leaned
I want a word with you. Albert"
Albert ceased operations on the fit
tlngrs and opened his tnouth slightly:
KDo T°u know " bat ‘hte
l«. With a dramatic gesture she
flung back the left side of her coat
and exposed a small enameled badge
It was extremely unlikely that Albert
would have any knowledge of It—
Indeed. It would have been fatal for
Tuppence's plans, since the badge In
question was the device of a local
.TIPLlr!,,!',ted 'be utThdeacon In
-J war. Its pre.
coat was due to
' used it f„r p|n. ,
. „ a d"y or two
But Tuppence had sharp I
corner of a I
protrud-
I that the fish would rise
“American
hissed.
Albert fell for It
Lord!" he murmured
Tuppence nodded at him with the
nir of one who has established
tnomugh understanding.
I geuhdly"’ "h° r“ ,fter?’’ 8he ‘“qulred
' broJIiT’ r’"’ J-f>un', ,T'd- demanded
breathlessly; "One of tl.c flllIJ,w
T“I‘P«iee nodded and Jerked .
thumb up the stnlrs.
"No. 20. Calls herself Vundemeveg
Van.lemeyer! Ha ! ha !”
Albert’s hand stole to his pocket,
queried eagerly.
I should say so. Ready
• in tlfe States.”
I mler an order issued by the Rail-
.<ad Commission Dallas has been ac-
I curded transit privileges uu peanut
{ suipmenta.
Sows Must Have Exercise
as Farrowing Time Nears
As farrowing time approaches the
■OW Should be in good condition, hut
not fat. If growth-producing fee,!,
have been used during pregnancy and
the ration kept bulky by using ground
oats, ground alfalfa or skim milk, the
-8h1?u,,i be ln thla sh«pe. Watch her
carefully, making her exercise each
day. A few days before she Is to far-
row put her In a pen and let her be-
came accustomed to her surroundings
Include a little wheat bran or linseed
oil meal tn her ration to prevent cost-
iveness. which Is common at this time.
The farrowing pen should be dry and
»ell ventilated. Spread straw on the 1
ground, but not enough to let her build
Tr a Pleres 2 < na"ad
•round the outside of the farrowing
pen about eight Inches from the floor
■nd eight Inches from the wall will
tend to keep the sow from crushing her
plgx against the walls.
After farrowing, the
celve no feed for from
broken only by the
word of explana-
— Then Tommy
of fingers.
Horses, Mares and Colts '
' ' demousiratma I “"‘‘ P^tetion law, according
1 nouUceniHnf n,./. r* ..
in
consumed an
7.42 pounds hay dally
time until they v -
ture in the spring,
'Jays, during which
pounds and t
of the period 830
That It
grain and 4.83 j-------
duce one pound gain on draft celts
from weaning time until turned on
pasture die next spring.
That in using
posed of 2 parts corn, 2 (- -- _;7_
1 part bran, ft required J'J.46 bushels
18.30 bushels of oats and
of bran to keep draft
growing condition from
J were turned j
corn silage. 8
with 8 pounds
satisfactory radon
work during the
i ...... """ • pause. »n<
i clear voice of the German
I silence:
“I am directed by—Mr. Brown, to
Place the summaries of the reports
from the different unions before you
That of the miners I
tory. We must hold back
ways. There may be trouble
A. 8. E."
For a long time tliere was a silence,
rustle of papers
tlon from the German "
heard tbe light tap-tap
dramming on the table.
“And—the date, my friend?” said
Number fine.
"The 29th "
TTie Russian seemed to consider,
soon."
t was settled by the
and we can-
much. The?-
entirely their
“A crook?" he
"A crook ! I
Rita, they call her
H . Kitn " repeated Albert de-
I lirlonsly. "Oh. ain’t ,t
pictures! Annie ahvavs said
she was a bad lot.”
"Who's Annie*’
idly.
, “’Ouse parlormaid. She’s leaving
'"lay. Many’s the tlmP Annie’s said
to me: ’Mark my words. Albert. I
«o,H,ln t wonder if the police was to
come after her one of these dnvs’
Just like that. But she’, a stunner
to look at, ain’t she?"
"She's some peach," allowed Tun-
Pence carelessly. ”F)n(I(i lt usefuI
In her layout, you bet. Has she been
. “ny of tbe -neralds, by the
•Emeralds’ Them’s
I stones, ain't they?"
Tuppence nodded.
. "That's What we’re after her for
kin” rknow' 01,1 nian Rysdale, the oil
I
Finest collection
world. Worth
“Lumme!'
Albert. "It sounds ,
tunes every minute.”
Tuppence smiled, gratified nt
success of her efforts.
“We haven't exactly
And”—she
wink—“I guess
goods
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Hart, Sterling. The Commerce Journal. (Commerce, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 27, Ed. 1 Friday, July 6, 1923, newspaper, July 6, 1923; Commerce, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1359554/m1/3/: accessed June 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .