1907 MORE STORIES OF SUCCESS 1908 



CONNECTICUT WOMAN'S BIRDS BREED BETTER THAN MANUAL STATES. SHE HAS 

 SEEN ONLY ONE LOFT OF BIRDS AS GOOD AS HERS AND THAT MAN BOUGHT HIS 

 STOCK OF US. I will give you a statement of the birds I received from you the 23d of April 

 1907. My buds do very much better than you state in your Manual. ' 



They arrived in perfect condition and are very lar^e and beautiful, have always been perfectly 

 iealthy. There has never been only one that was sick and that was caused from moulting and 

 raising birds too fast. I took her away until she had recovered and her mate cared for the 

 young burds. These birds lay when their young are from 12 to 21 days old. 



Some of them are sitting on their fifth lot of eggs. They have hatched 48 young birds in 

 four months and just three weeks, and expect more will hatch this week. Some of the young 

 ones are beautiful. 

 . I have never had young birds remain in their nests over three weeks. 



One pair build on the floor and their birds leave their nest at 17 days old. These weigh at 

 three weeks 14 ounces, others at ten days weigh one-half pound each, some at three weeks 

 weigh one pound. 



I have some that are very delicate from which I shall use for flying. These birds do not 

 weigh but 14 ounces at four weeks old. 



I have seen but one loft of birds as large and handsome as these birds, and those were owned 

 by a Mr. Comwell of Milf ord. He bought his first birds of you and claims that they raise 1 1 



?aiis of birds a year. One of my neighbors who was watching my birds said: " In all the birds 

 have ever seen these are the largest and most lovely." 



I have followed your advice in the care of them and would like to know if mine are doing 

 as well as the average you hear from. If I am successful in flying the birds will let you know. 

 Enclosed you will find money order for 50 pounds of health grit. — Miss A. A. W.. Connecticut. 



CHAIR SEATS USED FOR THE BOTTOMS OF NEST-BOXES, CHEAPER THAN LUMBER. 

 HOW TO CHOP UP STRAW FOR NESTING MATERIAL. I note you say use long boards 

 for bottoms pf.nests and short pieces perpendicular. I reversed this before seeing your plans 

 by standing Up long boards 1 2 inches apart, toenailed to wall. These boards have three-quarter- 

 inch by three-quarter-inch cleats for bottoms. I use 12-inch three-ply perforated seats. These 

 seats, are varnished, are light and strong, as your excellent bowls.' They are slightly concave 

 in center, just fitting the nestbowl, and the perforations do not extend beyond margin of bowl. 

 I fasten laowls to them with stove bolts. I can remove nut in a moment and have bowl and 

 base separate for cleaning, and they are cheaper than good lumber, which costs five to six 

 cents a square foot. Seats 12 inches square can be bought for three cents each. They come 

 10, 11 and 12 inches square. 



You suggest no easy way for chopping straw in proper length for nests. I have stumbled 

 onto a cheap and easy plan for small fellows like me. Use a common mitrebox and saw. 

 Place niitrebox on table near end and a receptacle beneath. One or two strokes will cut through 

 a big handful of straws and as you move up for next cut, the short ends drop into receptacle. 



I hope you do not consider all this didactic (or what not) for to tell the truth I have gotten 

 more pleasure and information out of your Manual than I could have gathered with endless 

 and expensive experimenting, and I want to help if I can in any small way. — P. O, L., New 

 Jersey. 



HIS BATH-PANS ARE MOUNTED ON A PIPE AND HE EMPTIES ALL WITH ONE TURN 

 OF A CRANK. FILLS ALL BY TURNING ONE VALVE. My self-feeder is just perfect. Two 

 of the ranches about here are fitting up with it. I also have all my windows raised or lowered 

 at the same time and with only one motion. One or as many as you like can be detached 

 and remain closed. I can stand in my feed room and do the whole thing without taking a step. 



My bath-pans are all moiuited on a one-inch pipe running through the flying pen. The 

 crank is just outside the end of the pen. It locks when the pans are up for bathing. The 

 water is turned on by a faucet outside the flying pens. Now to empty this, no going inside 

 the pens, frightening the birds and swashing the dirty water onto your hands. You just 

 unlock the crank, rock the pans to and fro two or three times, turn down your crank and 

 every pan dumps its dirty water onto a drip board running outside the pen. Leave your pans 

 down and no snow, ice, or droppings can get into them. 



My drinking fountains all work from the passageway. Not a particle of filth can get into 

 them. , , .... 



Nsw I have not written this in anv spint of egotism. I consider it just common sense 

 economy of my own construction. — ^J. W., New Jersey. 



THIS FLORIDA CUSTOMER BEGAN WITH TWELVE PAIRS OF OUR EXTRAS IN 1903. 



We now (September, 1907), have about 400 to 500 birds and during winter and spring have 

 killed on an average of 25 squabs per week. To be accurate in this I cannot, as no account 

 was kept, but must say the birds have proven very satisfactory indeed. Will give Mrs. B. your 

 letter upon her return and she can answer it also. — ^J. C. W. , Florida. 



LETTERS FROM CUSTOMERS RECEIVED BY PLYMOUTH ROCK SQUAB COMPANY 



205 



