HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1920-11-18, Page 7'14
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Winter Eggs—Hew to Gee el be: I.
First, and fundamental, we n ust net
forget that in the fall and wham' we
can expect our eggs front pulletonly
—that is, birds which have been hatch-
ed ie. the spring of the same year:
some lime between January and July.
These birds should mature hi about
six months' time and start laying.
The older birds take the fall and
winter for a natural resting period,
Which they must have -in order to ley
another year and to make breeders.
It is wrong to expect these birds to
lay profitably after the meddle of Oc-
tober and before the middle or the Met
of January, which is the season of our
highest egg prices and the time When
wo should expect a lot from our pub
lets. Of course, we occasionally Fee
flocks of old birds doing fairly well
during this period, but it is bead on
them, and almost invariably the
poultrymen will suffer a setback in
the end.
What are the factors of , poultry
management which More made pos-
sible the production of fall and winter
eggs? They can all be grouped under
two mein heads: 1, Breeding. 2.
• Feeding. . •
These are two very big factors, and
they cannot be separated, Either one
alone will not suffice, 'The best bred
pullet improperly fed will ,loaf all 'Win-
ter, and of course the best kind of feed
will not make the pure bred bird lay.
The saying goes, "You can't gut blood
Out of a turnip."
Breeding poultry for winter eggs is
principally a matter of breeding them
for early maturity, or breeding birds
which will mature and lay in eix
months instead of ten or twelve
months, as is natural; also breeding
birds which have the power of func-
tioning these reproductive organs for
a long period instead of for just a
short time in the spring or breeding
season.
This factor of breeding has long
been eetabliehed in most of our pree-
ent-day strains of poultry, especially
in the light breeds (Leghorns, Ancon -
as, etc.), and our general-pure:ma
ereeds (Plymouth Rocks, Wyandottes,
etei.). Of course, these are still being
improved each year by breeding, but
the main has been established so that
for the genera] run of poultry keepers
it comes down to a point of feeding.
Feeding for winter eggs starts back
a long way before we actually go out
aled gather them. It starts front the
time the pullet has developed from a
chick to a squab weighing about one
half to three-quarters of a pound. This
feeding will be treated later in this
article. It is enough to say here that
this bird must get, dulling the sum-
mer or growing season, a good, strong
frame upon which the poultrymanis
able to put some meat and fat for
reserve in the winter, and inside of
which frame she must live enough
room to manufacture eggs easily and
111 large numbers.
Assuming that we have this frame
on our pullets, the first thing we must
be sure of is a reserve of flesh and
fat. Until about a month before the
average pullet matures or starts to lay
she is using most or the feed she cen-
tuples for growth, and she is apt to be
a little shy of flesh.
If she has egg production bred in
her and you start feeding her at this
age or point with -a ration high in pro-
tein, especially animal peotein. such
as meat scrap, fish meta, etc., she will
begin to letY. She immediately begins,
then, to draw on wl 'at little surplus
or reserve 'flesh and fat he has, and
consequently uses th s up /11 a hurry,
especially if she is a heavy layer and
the' bad weather of fall and winter
has started to enter into the problem,
Just as soon as this surplas is used,
then she must rely entirely on her daily
rabiomto manufacture into eggs, It
is a euse of "from hand to mouth, and
no reserve." At the least little ad -
will prevent the birds coming in to
laying when they are too thin and have
no reserve, and will round them up
in good shape with a reserve for win-
ter work, Abort a month Of this
feeding should condition them, and
then they ideated be put on a laying
raticn, as fellows:
Mash 'Feed.
Wheat bran 100 ;lbs.
Wheat middlings 100 lbs.
Ground oats (heavy) • 100 Ibe.
Cornmeal 100 lbs.
Meat scrap (high grade) 100 lbs.
Feed dry, in self -feeders or hoppere
left before the birch at all times, and
easily accessible.
Scratch Feed
Corn 100 lbs.
Wheat
100 lbs,
Oats, barley, buckwheat,
Or kafir corn 100 lbs.
Scratch feed sheltie] be mit dawn to
verse cendition that comes in she must 8 to 10 pounds per 100 birds per day: e._
necessarily quit. Then on comes the one-fourth of this amount fed en the
Father, to teach willing learners, and
preach the love of the heavenly
duction for a month or six weeks,
resulting moll, and good-bye egg pro -
half ae night or one-third in the morn -
morning, one-fourth at noon, and one -
which He hgea vseickch em Th instructions
then and afterward, constitute our
I
THE SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON
NOVEMBER 215T
,
To Every Farmer's Son . Who Wants to "Quit .
Who are the Educators
and Co to Town,'
of Our Children?
-.9
The trouble with Haile of us is that' cauterises as 111 41011 of heavon as C73,11
s
we know too much, have hail too much well be found on this earth, I hope A fanithe edueator has said; "Edi'
happen to Ult. We have lived too long, that the little home is sot dcation has to do with the developmel 1own on
and thus have seen too lowly bee winds your own lame or 011 land that one of three powers:
1.
The Twelve Semi; Forth, St Mate 11). and droughts and army worms 404.1 day you van own, About it, then, you;
Accurate observe:ten],
Golden Text, St. Matt. 9: 37, 38. ntitets heettese
chinch bugs end flood's. We are pessi- can plant things urea watch them 'grow .' 2. Soundineigmene,
of all the things that The
ere is a rt joy in planting things.: 3. Lnergetic avt).00.
1-4, The Names of the twelve whom here happened to us, or happened in 02your own, about your awn little "Aecurato observation naturally de -
90u0 chose have become more fan- our Lanes, home, in veeing them develvp—tee velops .cemparison and contrasts that
iliar and better known Go the world The young man is luckier than we; trees, the vines, the ehrubs and flow- lead to correct judgment. The level-
. .
than, perhaps, any other iumies of hu- he has not seen all the evils that mayera heeed d eal ement brin 's a cony
1 e 3 e, gconviction
man history. Eleven stand high ill hump in the world, so he '
is nut op- Thenle' 1 h I en ea
• t litt e e i tha me to that of right anti wrong that produces 010
the werld's honor roll, one has become r' en ervi1
the synonym for traitor. These men, ' — e ' ' e . ‘ is ta" e 'of d What lt
4,011. 1.44. finer resa cut:
when they had been with Jesus for ing them. Tlee world is for the hope- the sooner ehildrea come tee better
1 education attain than the strange en.
some weeks or months, observing His ful, The optimist will inherit the • for all. There is more to be learned
ergelle =exacter whentee judgment min
work, listening to His teaching, asking earth. Beyond a doubt, there are mare, front being the father of children than.
un questions, drinking in of His spir- runny days coming than stormy ones, can be learned 10 any other way. One be re e upon 41.114 V. ose Ile S W1
t He sent out to do a 4 • Ile was doing more years ehen it will rain =eagle only begins ',reeky to live when his stated all testeng5
than years of drought. children tame. Then he awake= to the And
yet WO leave 011T litt10 children
'['h e one with courage, faith and op- deep and. :mired nmanieg of life and he a hazy world of confuacet sense-
timism wins, just so he is not too manheml. Then im 'begins, I hey*, to ImPreesion, rarely even calling oa
much of an optimist! i peon his owe. life anew, with two Ole- them to wee any judgment; and often, -
You, young nran, aro naturelly an; jects in view—te be worthy of the times not satiefying their eager =e0 -
maybe two months; where -os this same ing and twothirds at night.
pullet, hod she been fattened up for Feeding scratch in this way will
three weeks or a month before laying, tend to drive the birdsto the mash,
would have had the rezerve t 9 h0111 which they must eat to lay. The birds,
up under these rainy days, and would when this ration is fed, are just about
have laid steadily all winter.
The first step here is that of pre-
paring the pullet for 'her winter's task,
and not of pushing her into it by
heavy protein rations ;before she is
prepared far it. This applies to the
late-hatehed birds as well as to the
early -hatched fleck.
At this point -I do not want to be
misunderstood. I don't mean neces-
sarily the holding back from laying of
a flock of pullets ---not for the world—
but I mean that they must be ready
before they start. I have some very
good friends who were once in the
habit of practicing a starvation meth-
od on their early -batched pullets so
they would net start laying too early
and molt. .
This sbarvation, as I call it, was to
increase the amount of fibre -carrying
feeds in the lettion, such as bran,
ground Oats, and alfalfa nieal; also to
cut into the amount of meat scrap,
This was then followed by a heavy
feed when one was ready to have them
lay. These practices were directly op-
posed to Common sense, and invariab-
ly resulted -in a very unsteady winter
lay. LI the first place, these birds
were starved of any little surplus or
reserve they had, and then drawn
right to work, you might say, on to
reserve arremunition.
The following rations and method of
feeding will be found very efficient
for fall and winter eggs. About a
month before it is expected they
should start laying, or just about the
time they throw their growing molt,
their ration should be changed. Tbey
should be taken from a ration of a
high fibre and protein content which
tbey have been growing and develop-
ing on, and given a mere fattening
feta as follows:
Parts by Weight.
B ran 100 lbs.
Witch middlings
Cornmeal
200 lbs.
200 lbs.
Oilmcal 50 lbe.
Ground oats (heavy) . 100 lbs.
Meat scrap (high grade) 100 lbs.
This feeel should be fed dry, in self -
feeders, or hoppers, and left before
them at all times,
Scratch Feed—Parts by Weight.
Corn 300 lbs.
Wheat 100 lbs.
Oats, barley, buckwheat, ot
kali'. corn 100 lbs.
ready to lay, and it will push them
across in good, uniform shape, and un-
less something wrong happens in qual-
ity of feed, during the fall and winter
they should go through with a pretty
steady flow of eggs.
t'ent 0111.2*
•e•
The old high -gable -roof hen house
slag up tight is peeing. Unless the
hens were put well -up in the top of
such houses they were roostingein the
coldest part, anti that which contain-
ed the foulest air; and who could
blame them for climbing to the high-
est peach in the lot?
With the tall gable roof has gone
the stair -like roosts, fOT we know now
that heavy hens should not jump down
some six or eight feet. We pat the
roosts all on the same level, and that
not more than two or three feet from
the floor; and we have the roof low
so that the warmed air does net rise
small feet above their level,
If we leave the house so the air
drainage will take care of foal air as
fast as it drops after being cooled, we
can have the roof down as low as we
can get around under it. The house
that gave me the best satisfaction had
the hear wall four feet high, and was
about five -feet where I dropped the
three-foot curtain down m front ef
the rooets. This house -VAS twenty-
four feet deep alid fourteen wide. The
front was about nine feet high and
open, and I never had a frozen coinb
all winter, and got oggs continuously
The liens were never sluggish as they
are when they roost in a close house.
Only on tee coldest clays did the watm eeeele as to the disciples whom He
freene well bark where I kept the then 'sent out. "Freely," He said, "ye
watering pan.
have received, freely give"
In VS. 9-28 are many other counsels
Typewriters in Farm Homes. and warnings. The be the theme of their
preaching is to nearness of the
Any earm home that is. up to date kingdom of heaven, and that men must
has need for 0 typewriter. No 201111 prepare for its coming by repentance,
home can afford to be without one, They were to go forth in simple gar -
because -as a time-saver the 'tepee mop is, without ostentation, living on
writer is in the front rank. If it clicl the hospitality 0:2 the people who
not save time it would still be profit- would receive them, and leaving be -
able as a means of advertising the hind them, with such hospitable souls,
fthe blessing of peace. By contrast
arm,
ethem would
A letter written on a typewriter is those whodi
suffer greatd lnot reciveoss. They would, like
sure to command more attention than theft Magee, meet with persecution,
one written with pen and ink, and the but they would be sustained and guid-
reader will be inepreeeed with the fact ed by the Spirit of God.
In verse 23 Jesus makes- the strange
deularation, "Ye shall not have gone
over the cities of Israel till the Son of
man be come." Did Testes think that
in some marvellous way, by some dis-
play of supernatural power, sueh as
that described in 24: 29-31, His king-
dom would speedily be eseablished?
If see Ile must have suffered keen dis-
appomtment, for the disciples went
upon their mission and returned, and
no such extraordinary event happened.
Oo is there another explanation of
Christ's words?
20-31. Fear Ye Not This is the
great command of Jesus to Ina m15 -
stone -am Whatever may happen,
fear not,- Whatever 00 whosoever the
foe, be not afraid. Fear God and God
may. He who cares for the sparrows
cares very much and very tenderly
for those who go out to do His bidding
and to beer the gospel of Christ to
men. Pear ye not therefore.
"Thou on the Lord rely,
So safe shale thou go on;
Fix on Jlibj work thy steadfast eye,
Se shall thy work be done,"
37-42. Mare Than Me. Jesus makes
a very great demand upon His dis-
ceples. They must put Him first.
Neither father nor mother, neither son
nor daughter, must be more to them
thae He, Evert lite itself most not be
counted dear, The cross will he for
them 110 way of fife. And yet, is it
not true, in obedience to this demand
of Christ, to this law of dkripleship,
there lies the sanctifying and glorify-
ing of imman love, and the finding of
tree life, the life that le eternal?
Recelveth Me. Receiving His dis-
death, who wet* to be His measengere,
it would be as though they received
Hine and receiving received God
Himself who sent Hhe. lees a great
assmance and a greet patomiet. The
pimple end kindly end open-hearted
hoseleality of those who re -calve and'
eetortain °heist's' mmeeengers will
have its, abundant reward'. Even theri ask himself: "Io she the one that I
5-8. Go Not, Go Rather. The firet optimist. You feel things are worth wife he has teken, and live so al to taming with aceurate atatemenbe of
instruction is where to go and what, doing. You believe that thina,s will be worthy of imitetion be these clal- the things ahout which they are in.
to do, Jesus appears to have regard- win out To the young man is given dren growing um quiring. Ie this not due to tbe pre,
1
ed it as His first duty and that of most the happy faeuity of seeing Mix Prains With Your 'Work.
His disciples to minister to His own things—not as they are, but as the• ''' veiling belief that it does not mattee
people of the Jewe. Later He was to ought - • • what little children hear and see er
issue His command to go to Samaria to be. You lutve vision. On .
it But what uf the young men who own •
2 , h fathersIva what they oecupy themselves so
your father's farm you eee in your 1 ` bong 411 they keep well and are not
mind's eye fields of alfalfa where no farms—a-lud sort of tin outlook le too much trouble?
alfalfa as growing now, You pictureI
1 there for them? le is really very. The comment of a well known eau-
= the home farm modern buildings
' splendid. There is leo ..l the to the open, cat • d f th . el li d li
and to the Gentiles, to the end of the
earth (Ades 1: 8). But tow it was to
the people of Israel the diseiples were
sent. The gospel was to begin at Mgt for trained Young men.
diecipline of their history, and by the and equipment. You will baye some , Yelling success of bringeng up his family oe
home. The Jews, prepared by the long
tere, for tits coining; were to hear it which you can feed cattle. You may are hard to find, and are ,en. big de -
men who know practical agreculture
teen-. He seid, "The parentaa atbitude
revelationof the Old Testament Scrip- day a good barn for storing hay, under children is worthy of our considerca
first. If they wouM but repent and aspire to yards made mudiees with mend, They are wanted to man -age beg toward the higher things of the mine
turn to God and seek the way of faith, concrete. estates and farms. They are wanted is of paramount importance, espeetally
the great prophetic promise of theirto assist experiment stations. They in young children, The efteetimes
You s.ee in your vislon trees shelter -would be, as bearers of the gospel, and spruces on the north and west; are wanted ae -county agents and e -
contemptuous ineifferente with which
i aerators 'There isf•ntehee•a stheit they mature people treat the presence a
history would be fulfilled, and. they mg your farm, visions of fine trees
"for a light to the Gentiles a-nd for sides. You see an ore.hard, for every 1 esulle.12eillee' fi. ir' elite.eir* evae
salvation to the ends of the earth." grre°..teeens, for dome l
for of , children, displaying beeore them
This was the challenge of Jesus to habeas, manners aria conversation that
farm deserves an orchard. You see
bhein, this God's call to them throu h a beautieul farmhouse, modern, beauti- things. Then there is abecoutely need i are anything but desirable, is to me
expected and hoped great things, and commodious verandahs, eozy fire- that you ,ehall know praet-ical filming.
as well. I, teraporery life."
, one of the paralyzeng warders of con -
Him. ' We may well believe that e ful, with good architectural lines, with
that in the failure of the great mass Places' a shower bath and sleep- Get work on the beet -managed farm Children all around us are observ-
of the eewish people and of their xul- ing pierches. You get a mental 1 mthatyyou can find. Do tillage. Do a I
1 ing the maneers end listening to the
appointed.
ers to reepond He was bitterly alis- vision of a good road run- different kinds of work as .05'
conversation ef the adolts about theme
Preach, Heal. With preaching, no for the autoenabile. can doe Milo learn to do the: 5' 111.1
n wobb. and the general bearing of most chit-
ning by your farm, smeoth, hard, good
doubt, teaching was to go hand in There is a t of fun in that too. There dren is a direct. reflection of their
hand. 'So it is in the missionary work You have a vision a an automobile isi more irea. 1 pleasure ..in running .a home aurromeciinge. If conduct is
of the Charch to -day. Preachirg opens run an that good road, and a neat gar- el):altowe anc inrg ebratiauunri.t:hertrewieleathan irf.
; dignified and convereation is along the
up the way, attracts attentiom, persu- age to hold the automobile. You have bot Vele of some noble or far-reaching
and establishes and makes permanent. the paetures, and fine, broad, splendid fonYlin running a meerer or binder a:' I theme the eine I will be greatly bens -
Together with preaching and teach- purebred horses and peel tractors till- I ming all there le about them, learric-%
ing to 11121 them perfeetly. There ie ; fitted. If conversation is petty or
odes and wine. Teaching instructs a vision of good, purebred tattle in
work e., l pueree gaseip about the Ihnitations of
ing must go healing. The apostle and ing the fields. You want all these 4
no drudgery about farm.; . ttl one's neigaleors, the chile's mind is
the same spirit of compassion which sooner tha better.
g, and you want them soon—the does hie work pea' ei .
one. Drudgery comes al when ene' ••
t feetana uper, that rerameritiees seep -
the miesionary will carry with them thin
moved the heart of Jesus. They will . e • 1 plea it convereation is bitter and roe -
seek to, minister to the body as to the Well, all these good th)ngs may When you take up, as I hope yeu eee,„..,. Ilea= of the really Watt
soul. They will make God's love real mare to any young man iT be will have 'will, the problem of making =nee' on ' ' ''''..}.13S er ‘' - ' .'"
hi loving, human service. They will, .
patience, if he will get behind the farms, you will be amazed to sea that ' and noale motives ..of the world's best
as it were, take Christ's place, and W.1 W .
sh ith intelligence, directing wisely it is yet a difficult problem in Canada.'
. , people, the ebilda, mind is feeding
His healing and life-giving power 1V1 upon titat 901 00 for after all it ie
. . .11 hes efforts, getting behind with push. You will find that men toil, and toil: theeopinions of the people we leek up
flow through the, They will not turn The future of apiculture ,in Canada is. toe hard, upon farms. You will Sind.
back from any human need. The siek, a bright Tuture. The competition of . to that educate the majority of us
the lepee, the demoniac, the dead, will the world with our grains and meats that their evives toil, ani Toil too heel.1
- - more than tole- one factor of life.
be the objects of their interest and There are problems here for yeu to',
their care. Every word of Jesus ap- cannot materially harm us, because solve. These prablems are all :,elv-1
The hunger of the worla grows apace. Right planning of farms and farm Kick Out the Loafers.
pl.ies to the Church's work to -clay as the world is so much in need of food, able, we feel sure.
practices will result in more prolial If you hired a man to work on your
Farms can be so managed that their farm mei found that after two or
ownees weal not have to work to Imre. three eve lie was unfitted for his joie
Farm homes 050 10 replan/led so an to' that he mietreated the 'horses, that he
relieve the housewife of a part of her: 0014011 0111 half the cern In eultivat-
tell. I am sure that a farm can be elo; ine, anti that he ehowea 113 promise of
planned, se arranged. so schemed, that' doing better, abeut the first thing you
it will keep and increase its, fertility," would do would be to get rid of the
will make money, and afford a got& man. • Wouldn't you?
living to its owners, anti yet no one! If you bought a dairy Imifer for
need overwork, all do-ing their share. I your herd, and found afber she came
Ideals; culture, things worth living for in milk that she gave only tveo or
cannot come unless there is some little i three quarts a day, and that the milk
leisure for books, for thaughte, for liv- was pear quality. about the first thing
ing upon the farm. I you woula do would be to seal the aove
that is the anenver. Where will we In closing I want to eay just one for beef. Wouldn't; you?
get mon labor? Ab, I do net know word to the parents of the boy who; If a dairy cattle registry association
reads this: regleters a heifer coif with goad blood
If you want to interest your eon in line -a, and the calf develops into a
staying on the farm, give him an in- eaw such as the one you fired from
tercet in the place. Give him a piece your dairy herd, the registry aessoela-
of la.nd, er a little stock or something then would naturally eliminate from
he oan call his °wit and care for anti the registration book the cow that had
sell, and have the profit and the in- fall= down so mercilessly. Woulaa't
it?
crease therefrom.
Better still, take him intn partner- No; that isn't true yet. But there is
ship with you. Treat him as an equal, hope thet it will be true, as it should -
and talk things over with him. This, Nothing has done lima more to
and a good education, will usually give purebreds a ba,d mane -titan the
make eny fem. toy want to keep right registration of a dairy COW that Poen
on being a fanner. not do good work at the milk pail. A
And, incidentally, Mother can ac- farmer told nte not long ago that a
tamplish wonders evith the girls by purebred cow erbath he had reeeirtly
dolieg the RAMC With them. purchased, gave lege milk than any of
Ms grades. "Pm through 'with pure-
breds," was his corennene. When I
Eggs
asked him whether he studied the
Every Hen he said he had not. "1 bought her be-
eow's anceetors were heavy' milkerse
cow's peaigree to ace whether the
cause she was a purebred, and was
registered," ho :raid; whieh was poor
policy. Even so, such a row should be
kicked out of the registry eeeeciation
of her breed.
This may be varied in ingredients, that the writer is a pod man to deal
provided corn makes up from 50 to eon,
60 per cent, of the weight. The typewriter is economical; it
The amount of this stretch feed
should be increased until they are get-
ting from 10 to 12 pounds per day per
100 birds. If they leave the oats OT
barley, cut down on these grains in
the mixture.
MVOS the -cosi of peas and iok, more
words 'can be written on a sheet of
paper, and the xibbons will last a long
time,
• 41
The homes of a natant are its
Following this system of feeding strongest foes.
Stands Strenuous Wear
Or warmth, comfort and years
of wear, there is no under.
wear to compare with Stan.
field's. Made of the finest wool
and renderer' unshrinkable by
the wonderful, Stanfield process
this underwear is a comfortable
necessity for winter wear.
Made in Cotnbinations and Two -Pince Suits,
in full length, knee and elbow length, and
sleeveless, for Men and Women,
Stanfield's Adjustable Combinations and
Sleepers for growing Children (Patented).
Write for free sample book.
STANFIELD'S LIMITED
Truro, N. S.
05
In all the world, men are learning to
eat more expensively. Europe cannot
much increase her Production of food
over her pre-war production. Already
elm is producing about double the
wheat to the acre that we are pro-
ducing.
Oh, there are a hundred Wags for
the young man to test—to prove out.
We have not yet really begun to farm.
We have been merely cropping in the
past, Really to farm will take more
labor and more capital than wo have
had. Where will we get More capi-
tal e We must get it from the land
the answer to that question.
"What Can You Do?"
Now let us cone right down to the,
young mein and his job. Out in the
world You may be amazed to learn
that men do not: Much care how you
look; you may be red-heaeled or white -
headed, your -0705 may be black or
they may be blue, no one will math
observe or care. Nor, to your astoa-
ishment, will men care much for what
you know. The mere fact of your
having graduated from an apieultural
school is not .going greatly to
strengthen your case in the esbianation
of men in the world,. No, what the
world well ask es that old, eternal
question: "What can you do?" And
one only learns to do by doing.
I pity the young Man who has not
had opportunity to learn to do things.
He has only half developed. Ile is
like a sickly plant that has grown up
in the eletede, he leeks self-reliance and
backbone, Have can he have sehte
reliance and backbone when he hare not
back of him memories of having 911C-
ceasfully done thing's?
1000 EgFS
New System of Poultry Keeping—Get
Dollar A Dozen Eggs—Farnout Pout,
tryman
dress -ed by the young man is to take a
The first job -that should be ad- ,,
butZ'et'es
greAt. trouble with the eaulcre
wife. You 12107 01)0050 her even though Mg life a %gr.:44113ln° 4111144.11,!! *Lag fore, e
you doe not mati7 her, If you 0110050 Remy Trafrord, International Pou
lilapert and :Breeder, for nearly eighteen' 20:111iieercos u4niltdrysaiieLVTEUIS, OS nem lee -
%ounce, eoneervative and fully
To 1011.yeu the truth, there as a lot ttIrtiye. dependable elms' of people, such as the
uggietirvertir landeownera who
the right one she teat wait for you. years liklItor of Poultry Sureese,
af liolig•ht in mere welting, when She more. Then elre.goek to markei,Y
TELLS FLOW
is the right one and you are sum oe leeleete Ileeeneteeeieeetgeel KarggIsig tht
her anti sure of yettrself. There is, no one ehoueane minute (100 1011100 in°1vii4
pleasanter duty on , earth ellen thes,
as I eon sutra you will agree.
Hew will a young man <booth, from
inc yoking women that he lenows, the
one that is to bo his mate? I will
tell you the etc thing that above sill
others shouter deal& him. Let him
cup of 00.1d Water da. tr04111.04. tr0111i;." „,..:h to leeeonee the niethee a my
son has. sake "It as anposeible to no-
agino that the Almighty will ask you,
when you thine befoete Rio in the next
life, what your particular Aim of
eteed woe; •but the =mei= will matte
bo, 'Have you been true to yourself
and given htToly Name 41 cup of told
Water to ono of these little 011,00?'
The most preeitous poeseeelon that
over e01110.1 tO it man in this world is
4 woman's !mere
either= ?" That is whet nutting reed
marriage means, thank Gee, M the
country. Children come, they are OM
best gleis,of God, and eme wishes them
to have the best, the wortifleat hered-
ity. So let him choose,' hie mate that
he will be proud of hie
Your home need not be exteneiva,
A little 11011Ela four.eoorne, ot two
r000te with the right girl in it and
the right maa mantled to that girl,
system—and will lay them on it highlY
arollotwtlebasis Tun'aperhl:'fo.tireevoeh;rayou 1,1%:16edPloikhle
siHybwtni.rtyonriier,ure.besltotgot440nethtnyavly
to work to get 1.000 egg's from
auction all through eold whiter months 0°,
pullets; how to keep up heavy egg pro. ,a/1. limb is a good jeck-knife. Theo,
Man strOttlii carry wherever lie, game
every hen; how to get pullets laying
early; hnw to ntake the old 111111:4 1oy like
when eggs IWO- highosl; triple egg eve al wen:hate:11 ssoratfte;111.20i1k: ellnioe:,
ciliation; make slacker h••ns hustle; $0.00
refit from every hen In :+is whiter may be conventeet to hoed a f UN
things, lake two 01. three Baal of
needles,
a WISP Of thread, a pair et
seissoas and anme begins, Almost
every man has eeen the time when he
would have given anything for anti
things. A ogee of that kind can be
carried in the ireide cent packet or in
e eight handbag with your articles, ae
ateareag apparel, Haven't you pieta
tilt( redo; l• ttirewil onenoeytooliltrooloy mite, ohs afvroottal
Lc
,10•Ma and biliVetatt a Wetaed theng be
in yourself with,
stand for cyder and a equare deal for
ale.
When you go traveling, there am a
nonths• Thosand 115;111y other money
looking poultry sorrorta are oontained 50
Mr, Trafford's "1,000 IMO 1102N" system
of poultry retsina ono tope or which
will be gent absolutely free to 003' reader
ef thls Tamer who kOop., WIC hens or
Int,,;.2. Lots should go 1,1 a dollar or
111005 emea ewe aeliter. This ineano
eig plant 0 the poutee keeper who Rote
the 4055, arareera. neee Wee 1e
yen eldelteng on want teem tee
maim money ,for you. out Mit 41113 Rat
eonil 11 wit)) your name end tiodrose to
Henry Trarrore, suite 00-11,
1Tyne Dldg.
)11Ingbampfnu, 14; Y. and aroo fDeny 0
"TDB 1,000 111(1)1 Meg" will be,50111 b
return mall.
NO. 44--/2O.