98 
Oie  RURAL  NEW-YORKER 
January  15,  1916. 
PEARL  GRIT 
THE  HENYARD 
Poultry  Profits  Sure 
when  you  use  the  modern  coal-burning,  self- 
feeding,  self-regulating,  trouble-proof 
Newtown  Giant  Colony  Brooder 
It  raises  “the  most  chicks,  the  best  chicks, 
with  least  labor  and  at  lowest  cost.”  The  first 
successful  brooder  of  the  colony  type,  and 
years  ahead  of  all  imitations. 
V'Jiir  dealer  can  supply  it.  If  necessary  we 
will sffip  direct.  Helpful 
74  Warsaw  Street 
Scaly  Leg  grain  per  Hundred  fowls  to  start  with 
3  8  then  increase  or  diminish  this  amouu 
I  have  some  young  chickens  about  six  according  to  the  appetites  of  the  hens  ant 
months  old  with  scaly  legs.  What  is  the  the  amount  of  dry  mash  that  they  con 
cause  of  this,  and  what  can  I  do  for  it?  some;  you  will  soon  learn  how  much  ii 
Long  Island.  L.  r.  will  take  to  satisfy,  but  not  to  cloy 
A  small  mite  that  burrows  beneath  the  ^bem.  ISo  one  can  tell  you  in  quarts 
scales  upon  the  legs  and  spreads  from  one  *pore  uot;ks  are  underfed  than  are  over 
fowl  to  another.  Kill  this  mite  by  dip*  _  M.  B.  D. 
ping  the  fowl’s  shanks  into  kerosene,  be-  Hen  Lice 
ing  careful  not  to  get  the  feathered  por¬ 
tions  of  the  leg  wet.  or  by  rubbing  some  Can  you  give  me  a  sure  method  of  rid¬ 
gi-ease,  like  vaseline  with  a  little  kero-  ding  poultry  of  lice,  not  the  mites,  but  big 
sene  added,  into  the  scaly  shanks  and  gray  and  yellow  ones  that  stay  on  the 
repeating  after  a  feu  days.  At.  n.  d.  fowl  all  the  time?  I  have  about  250  hens 
in  one  house  and  200  pullets  in  another. 
The  pullets  seem  affected  worse  than  the 
older  ones  and  every  three  or  four  days 
one  will  get  so  weak  it  lias  to  be  taken 
Out  and  usually  dies.  These  are  Leg¬ 
horns.  They  appear  active  and  lively, 
lull  cannot  thrive,  and  do  not  lay  as  they 
should.  The  pullets  were  incubator 
hatched  and  had  the  run  of  the  farm  all 
Summer.  The  house  in  which  they  were 
put  had  been  occupied  by  some  of  the 
hens,  but  was  first  cleaned  ns  thoroughly 
as  possible,  soaked  in  strong  lime-sulphur 
solution,  sprayed  again  with  disinfectant 
and  clean  litter  put  in.  I  control  the  red 
mites  with  kerosene.  I  have  tried  every¬ 
thing  your  readers  have  suggested  froin 
time  to  time,  but  with  no  benefit — even 
that  of  tying  bottles  of  carbon-bisulfide 
under  the  roosts.  They  have  a  wallow  of 
dry.  sifted  coal  ashes.  The  commercial 
louse  powders  will  kill  the  lice,  but  I  have 
to  use  so  much  that  it  usually  kills  the 
hen  also,  and  these  are  pretty  expensive 
to  use  in  quantities.  Can  someone  give  a 
method  they  know  to  be  successful? 
New  York.  j.  p. 
The  latest,  and  apparently  the  most 
promising,  sure  destroyer  of  lice  on  ma¬ 
ture  fowls,  is  vaseline  and  blue  ointment, 
mixed  together  in  equal  parts.  A  piece 
about  the  size  of  a  grain  of  corn  is  well 
smeared  over  the  skin  of  the  fowl  in  the 
fluff  just  beneath  the  vent.  It  should  not 
be  rubbed  into  the  skin,  but  should  cover 
about,  the  size  of  a  silver  dollar. 
This  is  the  simplest,  easiest,  and.  accord¬ 
ing  to  the  testimony  of  competent  nntil- 
trymen.  the  surest  method  of  ridding 
fowls  of  lice  that  1ms  ever  conn*  under  my 
observation.  "lilne  ointment’’  is  mercu¬ 
rial  ointment,  and  the  open  box  should 
not  lie  left  around  where  the  family  pets 
i night  be  tempted  to  sample  the  contents. 
From  your  description,  it  does  not  seem 
likely  that  lice  are  the  cause  (if  the  deaths 
in  your  flock.  You  seem  to  have  waged 
a  vigorous  campaign  against  them.  It  is 
fortunate  that  the  bottle  of  carbon  bisul¬ 
phide  was  not  in  a  sufficiently  small  and 
well  closed  space  to  enable  its  fumes  to 
kill  the  lice  on  your  hens,  face  on  dead 
If  you  want  this  year’s  brood  to 
live — feed  them 
H-0  Steam-Cooked 
Chick  Feed 
Cuts  out  the  uncertainty  of  home-mixed  feeds,  the 
fuss  and  trouble  of  mixing,  etc.  H-O  Steam- 
Cooked  Chick  Feed  saves  a  larger  per  cent  of  every 
brood  because  it  is  a  feed  that  chicks  can  digest. 
A  Laying  Question 
Will  you  tell  at  what  period  a  hen 
would  have  laid  an  egg  which  tit  the  time 
she  was  killed  had  attained  the  size  of  a 
pinhead?  I  wish  to  know  whether  that 
hen  intended  to  get  her  Winter  board 
free,  or  pay  for  it  at  the  proper  time. 
New  Jersey.  A.  It. 
The  above  query  lacks  definiteness.  At 
what  time  of  year  was  the  hen  killed? 
And  was  the  '‘pinhead”  egg  the  largest 
of  the  embryo  eggs?  What  breed  was 
the  hen.  and  how  old  was  she?  Was  sin* 
concluding  her  molt,  or  had  she  just  be¬ 
gun  it,  or  neither?  With  full  knowledge 
of  all  these  facts  a  genuine  Yankee,  a 
good  guesser — might  guess*  within  say 
two  or  three  months,  of  when  she  might 
be  expected  to  lay.  The  chances  are  that 
the  hen  fully  expected  free  board  and 
housing  for  the  Winter;  that  she  did 
not  intend  to  sing  a  single  note;  tlyat  she 
expected  gratitude  for  previously  laid 
eggs  would  be  all  sufficient  for  her  Win¬ 
ter  care.  Seriously.  1  assume  that  the 
question  is.  how  long  will  it  be  before  a 
hen  begins  to  lay.  when  the  ovurns  are 
as  big  as  a  pin  head?  So  far  as  I  know 
there  has  never  been  any  attempt  to  de¬ 
termine  definitely  tin*  period  it  takes  for 
such  embryo  yolks  to  attain  full  growth. 
The  season  of  the  year  would  have  very 
much  to  do  with  it.  In  the.  Spring,  when 
the  worms  are  coming  to  the  surface  of 
the  ground,  and  green  grass  is  abundant, 
the  growth  would  b«  much  more  rapid 
than  at  any  other  season. 
GEO.  A.  COSGROVE. 
One  big  breeder  says,  "I  haven't  lost  a  chick  this 
year."  Why  not  try  it  on  your  next  brood  ? 
Write  for  sample,  prices  and  descriptive  folder. 
The  H-0  Company 
Mills: 
BUFFALO,  N.  Y. 
John  J.  Campbell 
General  Sales  Agent 
HARTFORD,  CONN. 
INCUB  AT  O  R 
THERMOMETERS 
*  LOST  Only  I  CHICK  Out  of  272  ■■ 
**  f  Jont  hut  one  chick  In  6  weeks,  272  in  tho  flock,  with  my 
Oiuidto  Ivjlotiy  )Sr«x*<l«‘T  t  n**v»*r  non  brooder  of  any  kind 
before,  Some  of  my  chick*  weinh  ov<5»  one  poUiid.  ’  * 
IJ.  St..  John,  Idle  h*cirr  St, ,  Jiwkxon,  Mien. 
DISTINCTIVE  Hrootl*  up  It*  hno  chirks  :n  one  flock  :-.nl 
Ini?  II-.  coni- rcoOoutlCAl.  Coal  fnmjazino  Tfods 
f ANDFK  Bru,  atui  heater  »h  n«lf  -  rvjruUUnp  —  lubor- 
*4»vW.  Lur-Kcr  12  -  Inch  w  ipraf  e  and 
FFATURF^  '.,..\io,T  bont.*r  fp  J  iligh,  flut.. 
rr^AiuivLD  big,  ail-Arouiidbovvr-^.^  I  plenty  of 
frcrli  nir  for  eMcko.  Long,  __  •— 111  w — 
nil  wool  i  iirtAin  *—  kLoph  J 
clrouifhUt,  ir*uri-«  Zr  ~  !r  — 
regulation  «rxl  rvtvc*  fmU,  /  — -=^==^2 
\Vt,1r  tod, iv  for  ropy  erf  I  •  — f| 
Colony  Brooder  Co On'cv 
a  ml  yaftc  tnutt  Chfok*.  ^ 
CANOee  INCUBATOR  (ft.  Iff^ - '  .vtffiffil  ki 
BROODER  CO.  □«:,(.  R  IRIK  !  i  f  -  ITT)]  }J  l|"fl  B 
C U C I  If  xon  want  plenty  0%  ■% 
■ontl  of  eye-  .-•< id  strong  fin  IT 
1:k.  feed  a  reujrh  grit:  feed  n  I  _  PC  I 
i  that  grinds ;  feed  "  M«ky.  1111  | 
Th‘1.”  I  so<I  toy  Mu'*  iMrfftte’t  potil-  III  I 
(ryinen.  Aslf  your  ii ualer  or  8rnd  SI. 00  for 
l,w<*  l.iM)  lb.  tmtf*,  f.  ii,  l»,  ears:  Middle  and 
N*  'v  Emriand  mfiicn  1  ton  $5.30:  one  ton 
$io,  freight  ptiid,  Ak,a,»1‘-  wciutocl. 
Eiiije  Hill  Silica  Rodt  Co.,  P.ux  J.  Nrw  Brurswidi.  N.  J. 
and; 
Id  IN, SURF  Btsr  0F  ,flYFRS  ™IS  FflFL  AND  WINTER. 
iu  inounc  sT0CK  MUST  HflVE  proper  CARE  AND  FEED 
We  have  a  Chick  Mash 
tWnt  is  tlie  trrentest  food  yot  offered  for  producing 
layers.  .Send  for  ejvenlfu*  and  price  list. 
WM,  OKR  A:  SONS.  Box  8«  Orr’s  M Ills,  X.  Y. 
CastIrom 
CoalDgbning^llV* 
Bcrv  If.  th*»  low  niwd  famoaa  ^ZZl _  a 
Detroit  lncuba*.or-a  wizard  .  _  •  .  B 
■fttfdfc-  <v»c  huidhhiK  mi* thine,  eirajrlo  Kjir 
raff  nn^rebsbli*,  ItnrhaU-hosaBuro  JltJKlLLirfl 
^  Lniiur.  l.kr*:»ipt^>ductfon  makea  ^  -  ♦  •  Pt- 
my  pnd©  low.  Post  Card  I 
^  now  lor  my  free  book  and 
startling  price  offer, 
j$  HOMER  L.  SMITH,  Pres. 
Detroit  luctiba lor  G«. ,  43 6 Campbell Ave.  Octroi!,  Mich. 
Wyandottes  for  Small  Flock 
I  live*  in  a  town  and  keep  50  to  100 
liens,  have  a  good  yard  and  green  food 
for  them.  T  would  like  to  know  about 
the  Wyandotte  breed,  English  and  Amer¬ 
ican.  Are  they  single  or  double  comb, 
wlmt  weight,  and  which  breed  would  you 
advise?  I  keep  the  hens  for  eggs  mostly, 
but  when  I  turn  off  the  Leghorns  they 
are  so  small  I  don't  get  much  meat,  and 
they  do  not  stay  in  the  yard  as  well  as 
a  larger  fowl.  C.  w. 
New  York. 
For  a  small  family  flock  of  hens,  the 
Wyandottes  or  some  other  one  of  the 
American  breeds,  like  the  K.  I.  Reds  or 
Plymouth  Rocks,  possess  some  marked  ad¬ 
vantages  over  the  smaller  varieties  of 
fowls.  Where  eggs  are  sold  locally,  there 
is  often  little  difference  in  price  between 
white  and  brown,  and  where  the  sur¬ 
plus  stock  is  dressed  for  market  or  cateu 
the  larger  fowls  have  it  all  their  own 
way  ;  still,  there  is  so  little  profit  on  a 
dressed  enronss,  Whether  large  or  small, 
that  this  feature  should  not  weigh  too 
heavily  as  against  a  marked  difference 
in  the  price  of  eggs.  The  choice  between 
the  breeds  is  largely  a  personal  one; 
more  depends  upon  the  strain  and  the 
can*  which  the  fowls  get  than  upon  the 
brood.  One  who  thinks  to  revolutionize 
his  business  in  poultry  merely  by  chang¬ 
ing  tla*  breeds  is  usually  disappointed;  if 
he  cannot  do  well  with  one,  lie  isn’t  apt 
to  with  another.  Because  of  their  win¬ 
dings  in  recent  egg-Iayiug  contests,  the 
English  Wyandottes  have  come  into  in¬ 
creased  notice,  though  it  is  doubtful  if 
the  average  English  Wyandotte  is  super¬ 
ior  to  tin*  average  American  one.  The 
English  winners  have  been  in  expert 
bands.  Any  stra<n  that  has  long  been 
bred  for  t  hi*  show  room  should  be  left  to 
the  fanciers  and  an  effort  made  to  secure 
stock  from  flocks  of  known  high  produc¬ 
tion.  The  Wyandottes  have  msc  combs. 
SEND  FOR  HANDSOME  FREE  CATALOGUE 
H.  K.  BRUNNER,  45  Harrison  Street,  N.Y 
more  egg-i:  larger,  more  vigorous  chicks; 
heavier  lowls.  by  leedirig  cut  bone. 
MAIlll’C  LATEST  MODEL 
nwtnn  o  bone  cutter 
cuts  fast,  easy,  fine;  never  clegs. 
Trial.  No  mirnry  in  advance.  Hook  tree. 
CO.,  Box  16.  MILFORD,  MASS.  ■ 
lluSW  m  Strong, binding  gnaran-  1 
ty.  Hacked  by  SO  years  of  £, « — uTa 
p.aeccBS.  California  red-  [| i T  1 
wood.  Triple  walls,  nsbwst  os  lined.  Ip— — p-Fi—  'AFmV 
Pure  copper  tank.  Automatic  rvgu-  II  jj| 
lator.  Safety  lamp.  Everything  you  I  I 
need.  Thousands  in  ww.  I  Comes  U 
Write  tor  book.  Send  name  today  *  set  up,  | 
for  great  free  book.  Don’t  delay.  ready  to  use 
Mankato  Incubator  Co.,  Box  795*  Mankato.  Minn. 
DO  IT  NOW 
fTLT  youvspnne  order  in  now  for  S.  C.W.  Leghorn 
^  baby  thicks,  ami  be  sure  lo  plant  tbo  Kami'  with 
tbe  farm  that  ban  tlia  goods.  We  are  not  r,uh 
quantity  breeders,  but.  quality  breeders.  jg(.  chirks 
bought  as  Into  ns  July  htb  last  year  beat  *,’o()  rggs  in 
•  be  bauds  of  our  customer*.  Not  every  one  did  this, 
but  ymi  will  get  as  many  big  layers  In  our  strain  as 
you  con  Id  probably  buy.  and  our  stock  is  straight 
American  bred,  an  English  blood  in  our  strain.  \Ve 
believe  in  good  looking  Leghorn:'  that,  lay  good  white 
eggs  ns  well  as  good  layers  and  this  kind  of  stock  is 
"hut  all  breeders  will  eventually  buy.  We  shipped 
over  100, (100  baby  chicks  last  season. 
One  of  our  customers  iu  Connecticut  who  pur¬ 
chased  0000  chick*  from  ns  last  spring  made  a  md 
profit  of  around XairO.OQ  in  tho  month  of  November 
He  raised  over  90*  of  his  chicks  anil  this  v-  ur  wo 
have  his  order  for  <000  more  for  next  season.  We 
sold  4UII0  eggs  to  one  party  in  Virginia  last  spring. 
This  ynnr  wo  have  already  received  his  deposit 
on  25,000. 
Our  stock  usually  makes  good,  and  our  plant  is 
continually  growing.  Wo  operate  seven  Hall  Mam¬ 
moth  Incubator*,  and  can  take  your  order  for  up  to 
12,000  chicks  u  week.  Our  prices  are  nt>  higher  than 
1r>7*  pniniiliHi  lii'tul  vfrwlr  Tliflpp  ia  nr, 
POULTRY  PAPER 
u  p  t  o-  it  a  t  e : 
tells  all  you  vent  tc.  know  about  c»ro  anil 
Minmigeiiiciit  of  poultry  for  pleasure  or 
profit.  Four  months  ror  II)  cents 
nil  I  I  in  (IIVIM  AT  I  ,  Ik-pt.  tW,  gjracuM-,  X.  t. 
pal  van  i  sou  | 
CONKEY  SAYS: 
Don',  Worry— Stndy  poultry  diseases 
when  trortblo  comes.  They're  easy  p 
4c.  l'or  the  new  M0  page  Poultry  Hook, 
able  facta,  t'oukey  Co.,  Cleveland.  (> 
mil  be  ready 
cl"  Send 
Full  of  vain- 
Get  FREE 
Chicken  Book 
Twenty  birds  eit  route  from  England.  These  and 
former  importations  ill  my  coining  pens.  The  util¬ 
ity  breed  of  the  near  future  M  ating  list  on  request 
alter  January  1st.  W.  W.  GRAVES.  Jefferson  City.  Mo 
\\  ^  y.;W  Our big.illus-  ^ 
trated,  1916 Year- 1 
\ Vv  VV  v  Boole— ‘‘Profits  in 
\ Poultry  Keeping” 
\YV  *  ,.'p>  ’  —will  help  yon  male 
\  \\  ,  more  money  with  fowls. 
Telia  howto  ruisa  chicks, 
\  get  more  eggs  and  muke  larger 
X-***'''  profits  with  lens  work.  Lcurn  about 
Cyphers-Built  Incubators 
Sold  at  Low  Prices 
Quality  unequalled.  Big  hatches  nnd  n  quaranlee 
that  protects  you;  backed  by  SOvcai «  of  leadership. 
.  We  want  yea  to  btiveu  copy  of  this  great  Guido  l 
k  for  Pool  i  ry  Haiecrs.  Writcfnr  it  today— free.  A 
m.  cTPmiis  iRCiwAtuR  i*„  iiopi.  38,  uumiLO.K.T.  M 
JSctvivrk  CfiieaffO  JiiiUut 
60  Varieties  of  Purebred  Pou  I  try  ni’ey  .';s'  tu  it-  ‘a  n 
H  ires  and  C* 1 1 lie  i>ij(i8.  Large  descriptive  catalog 
I'Tee.  Kilmn  A.  Soiuler,  Itox  It,  Telford,  Pa. 
LIGHT  BRAHMA  AND  ROSE  COMB 
RED  COCKERELS  AND  PULLETS 
L.  MILLER. 
Highland,  New  York 
fill  Reel  Rrppflu- Chickens,  ducks,  geese,  turkeys. 
UU  Duo  DIGCU3  gninoas,  dogs  and  hares.  Stock  for 
sale.  Valuable  catalogue  free.  H.A.Sonder,  Boxtg.ScIleuvillc.Pi 
S.  C.  WHITE  LEGHORNS 
DAY-OLD  CHICKS  —  EGGS  FOR  HATCHING 
from  Selected  2-yoar  old  horn,  on  five grus>  mng.-  maled 
"ill.  Tom  Barron  male*  from  iWO -egg  ticns.  Ksgs  and 
chicles  giumuitci'il  mtiofuctory  to  you  on  arrival.  In¬ 
fertile  eggs  fri  cxeeKK  of  III“o  replaced  free,  t'andee  i n  — 
cuba tor  operated  l>.v  itie  owner,  whose  peiKoiial  alient ion 
is  given  to  all  shipment «.  S«  acres  and  86  yeai*'  exper¬ 
ience  deiotod  to  8,  r.  \V,  Leghorns.  Eggs,  s?  a  ton 
L'llicks,  |U  a  100.  Quantity  prices  ami  Informal  ion  un  Papuan 
THK  NI8SEQUOGPE  FARM 
K.  T,  Smith,  Owner  &  .Mgr.  Sr.  James  P.  O.,  L.  t„  N.  A'. 
TUP  |f  C  VC— 300  Bronze,  B.  Red,  N'arr. scan  sett  Hlack, 
I  UnilC  10  White  and  .Slate.  Muscovy  Lucks  and 
Chickens.  Circular.  Write  CLARK  BROS.,  Freeport.  0. 
Jiotton 
OukUuuL 
Quantity  of  Feed  Required 
I  ltave  200  White  Leghorn  hens  :md 
pullets  together,  and  I  am  told  that  four 
quarts  of  wheat,  oats  and  corn  is  all  that 
is  required  for  .scratch  food.  I  have  a 
Cornell  dry  ration  before  them  at  all 
times,  but  I  can't  see  if  they  are  to  go 
to  roost  with  their  crops  filled  where  they 
will  get.  it  from.  Is  this  four  quarts  of 
grain  enough  for  all  day,  or  do  you  feed 
more  in  the  afternoon  before  they  go  to 
roost?  How  many  quarts  of  whole 
scratch  grain  is  required  for  the  whole 
day  for  100  hens?  s.  M.  G. 
It  is  not  desirable  to  feed  hens  by 
measure,  unless  the  measure  of  their 
appetites  is  taken  as  the  standard.  Four 
quarts  of  whole  grain  per  day  would  be 
a  scant  ration  for  200  Leghorns,  how¬ 
ever.  If  is  best  to  feed  whole  grain 
twice  daily,  in  the  morning  and  at  night. 
Enough  should  be  given  at  each  feeding 
to  temporarily  satisfy  the  fowls  but  not 
enough  to  make  them  inactive.  If  a  dry 
mash  is  kept  before  them,  they  should 
eat  about  half  as  much  of  this  during 
the  day,  by  weight,  as  they  do  of  the 
whole  grain  in  the  two  feedings.  If  they 
are  disinclined  to  eat  enough  dry  mash, 
cut  (town  the  morning  feed  of  grain  and 
Mammoth  Emden  Geese  ffi';  ,tfr| 
HmL  t’limpiues.  Minorca*.  Leghorns,  Wyandottes 
Maple  Cove  Poultry  Yards,  K.  3,  Athens,  Pa, 
—JOHN  V.  SMITH 
Sharon,  Connecticut 
Mrs.  1C.  J.  Kider 
Kocluiau,  N.  Y. 
Purebred  Whits  Holland  Turkeys 
Best  Squab  Producers.  Breeding  Stock  for  Sale 
A  Lit  IDA  FA  KYI,  .  Atlantic,  Conn, 
WHITE  ORPINGTONS 
S.  C.  White  Leghorns 
/“tHNOVfv 
/PKMNl to' 
Iroi/kTfrv 
I  ANO 
VvATC  M 
Njuiitusy 
(Not  an  Expense,  a 
Money  Maker 
Repnv*  its  cost  over  line!  over  In  bigger, 
healthier,  better  laving  fowls.  Grit 
that  in  more  than  grit,  A  ids  digestion, 
gives  appetite,  bup plies  egg  shell,  bone 
and  (Valuer  material.  Send  for  booklet. 
THE  OHIO  MAKBLE  COMPANY 
40  S.  Cleveland  81.,  Phiuu,  Ohlu 
Place  Your  Order  Now 
for  eggs  and  chicks  from  Laureiton  Layers 
Utility  Leghorns  Exclusively 
Our  Pure  Tired  Trap  Nested  Payers  are 
bred  for  size,  vigor,  quality  and  heavy 
egg  production. 
Secure  Hatching  Eggs  and  Chicks  from 
the  strain  that  has  made  the  world’s 
largest  poultry  plant  a  success. 
Send  today  for  descriptive  circular  3nd 
prices. 
LAURELTON  FARMS 
Box  H  Lakewood,  N.  J. 
High  Grade  Utility  Stock.  Day-old  Chicks 
and  Hatching  Eggs. 
PEACEFUL  VALLEY  FARM 
Oxford  Depot,  Orange  County,  New  York 
Famous  for  High-grade  Construction  and  Efficiency 
TT  is  built  for  actual  business  and  not  a  toy.  U  is  the  only 
1  brooder  tu  America  built  with  a  gas-collective  chamber 
over  top  of  beater  and  with  it  double  grate,  Tlie  beat  regu¬ 
lation  Is  perfect,  tbe  price  reasonable.  We  also  manufacture 
tbe  Magic  Brooder  with  top  and  bottom  draft  at  $15.00.  Write 
for  circular  describing  both  brooders.  Agents  wanted. 
UNITED  BROODER  CO.,  32  Bellevue  flve.,  Trenton,  N.J. 
