OLIVER D. SCHOCK. Hamburg: 

 Rats and cats destroy ten dollar 



A. H. ADAMS, Jacksonwald; 



A. M. YOUNG. Womelsdorf: 

 Five dollars, through rats. 



BLAIR COUNTY. 



HON. GEORGK M. PATTERSON. Williamsburg: 

 Thirty dollars; mostly by hawks. Crows take i 

 eggs, and some chickens and young turkeys. 



FRED JACKEL, Hollidaysburg: 



Have never lost chickens by foxes or wildcat 

 rats, through carelessness; a few ducklings by c 

 by hawks. 



J. W. BRACKEN, Hollidaysburg: 



I live in town and have some poultry. The oi 

 tained is from rats taking the young. 



BRADFORD COUNTY. 



.\. McCABE, North Rome: 



I have inquired among the farnifrs whu raise poultry, and 

 they say they lose nearly forty per cent, every year from the 

 above named animals. 



C. S. DAVIS. Allis Hollow: 



Breed high class poultry. Lost twenty dollars' worth of 

 turkeys year before last. Last year about fifteen dollars by- 

 foxes and hawks. 



JACOB L. BALL, Litchfield: 



Twenty dollars on turkeys and ten dollars on chickens 

 H. CHAMPLIN. Orwell: 



I am raising some poultry each year. Several years ago 

 was troubled some with rats among the young chickens; later, 

 and the last pest, was skunks. For the past four years no 

 loss from any animal depredations. 



A. E. HAMILTON, Potterville: 



Protect my poulto' by wire netting_ and have no loss. 

 Those who do not use this protection occasionally lose all 

 their poultry by minks, skunks and foxes. Turkeys suffer 

 mostly by foxes. 



