"roast" ohickene and turkeys from farmers. In some oases 

 this loss is from three to five dollars each. This is a fad with 

 a class, and we would shoot them, but are asleep. 



UNION COUNTY. 



JOHN A. CAMPBELL, Belleville: 

 Perhaps five dollars, but the expense and truuble of guarding 



GEORGE E. LONG, Lewlsburg: 



I have never lost any poultry by anything hut i 

 disease. 



J. A. GUNDY, Lewisburg: 

 Think very tew; mostly young birds 



WARREN COUNTY. 



WALTER M. SHULER, Warren: 



I lose some poultry every year; chiefly from hawks. 

 N. P. MORRISON, Tidioute: 



I do not raise poultry to i 

 a hundred per year. Loss do 



W. B. HALE, Ackley Station: 



About ten per cent. 

 CLINTON MILLER. Tidioute; 



From two to five dollars' worth, m 

 owls. 



P. N. ROBINSON, Scofleld: 



Tes, only by hawks; probably ten 

 during the spring and summer. I am 

 the boys will kill them just the same 



W. W. WILSON, Ackley Station: 



I do not lose any to speak of; not a dollar's worth in five 

 years. Never heard of such a thing as crows stealing eggs 

 and catching the young of domestic fowls. I think the crow 

 is like some men. "he has got a bad name." The crnw and 

 the English Sparrow are both useful birds. 



WASHINGTON COUNTY. 



JULIUS LEMOYNE, Washington: 

 I keep flock of about one hundred chickens. 



PRKSST.Y LEECH. 

 From twenty to t 



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