MORE STORIES OF SUCCESS 
7. WHOLE CORN. 
8 COARSE CRACKED. 
9, FINE CRACKED. 
No. 7 is common yellow whole corn. No. 8 is coarse-cracked corn sifted and No. 9 is fine-cracked corn sifted. 
(See the chapter on feed in this Manual for full instep As a rule the coarse-cracked corn No. 8 should be 
fed instead of the fine-cracked corn No.9. This No. 9 sample of corn is what is known as chick-cracked corn. It 
is good for little chicks. 
HIS SMALLEST PLYMOUTH ROCK 
te WEIGHS THREE-QUARTERS OF A 
UND AT THE AGE OF THREE WEEKS. 
My birds are very tame, so much so that when 
I go into the coop with hemp seed or other 
dainties and hold out my hand, they fly right 
on it and eat. I was weighing my squabs 
yesterday, and the smallest one I have at 
resent weighs three-quarters of a pound. 
+ was three weeks old yesterday.—G. A. W., 
New Jersey. 
HOT SELLERS. I want to know if it 
is too late for me to.send for pigeons on that 
Special Offer. If it is not too late, when I 
hear from you I will forward the money. 
I am having good luck with the pigeons I 
bought of you last year and am selling the 
squabs as fast as I get them.—T. N., British 
Columbia. 
WE SELL TO HUNDREDS OF FANCIERS 
TO BREED FLYERS. Although I am not 
interested much in squab breeding I am 
interested in flying. A dealer in my neighbor- 
hood has a few of your birds and finds them 
retty good for flying so I intend to try some.— 
i. S. B., Pennsylvania. 
THREE PAIRS SHOW WHAT THEY 
ARE GOOD FOR. Ever since I have had 
your birds they have bred remarkably well, 
one pair raising eleven pairs of fine squabs 
in one year. Not one pair that I bought of 
you or raised myself has raised less than 
nine pairs of prime market squabs per year. 
I think that isa fair record. Besides ening 
plenty of squabs, I have worked up a floc] 
of 30 pairs of prime breeders from_the origi- 
nal small lot of three pairs.—R. E. F., 
Michigan. 
GOOD PRICES FOR SQUABS IN PENNSYL- 
VANIA. Squabs have been quoted at $4 
to $4.25 per dozen, seven pounds to the dozen, 
in our papers here. I donot know what mine 
weigh as I have not weighed any of them, but 
feel satisfied that they will go more than that 
as they are large.—A. A. R., Pennsylvania. 
EVERY WORD TRUTH. A friend of mine 
gave me one of your National Standard Squab 
Books the other day and I have read it through 
and think it is every word truth, having 
raised pigeons a long time, but never for 
the market, so think I know a little about it.— 
R. H., Iowa. 
LETT: 
ERS FROM CUSTOMERS RECEIVED BY PLYMOUTH ROCK SQUAB COMPANY 
289 
