Proceedings of Seventeenth j^okmal Institute 297 



The breeding, and especially the exploiting and marketing of 

 pure bred stock, is quite as much a part of farm management as 

 of animal husbandry. 



The question of land values and the rental of lands is of 

 especial importance in certain localities. 

 . The laying out of the farmstead ; that is, the arrangements 

 of the fields, fencing, roads and buildings, with reference to soil, 

 highways, hill and dale, forest and stream and hamlet, is one of 

 the most important of all. 



The farm home itself is a matter of farm management as well 

 as of architecture. 



Finally, the whole subject cannot be learned solely from books 

 nor can it be made to confonn strictlv to anv written rules or 

 principles. Very largely it must be made by every man on his 

 own farm to fit his own particular conditions. 



