iyi2. 
613 
THfci •RURAL NEW-VORKER 
The Henyard. 
Mulberries and Turkeys. 
Here is a question I would like to hear 
discussed. Do mulberries affect turkeys? 
Last season my turkeys were constantly 
under the tree and ate every berry that 
fell. As the tree is a shade tree in the lawn 
I hesitate about cutting it down. n. d. m. 
Connecticut. 
I do not think mulberries will do turkeys 
any good. I have noticed that my birds 
are crazy to eat grapes, raspberries, cur¬ 
rants, etc., and. I have also noticed that 
when they do <*?.t a lot of this small fruit, 
I always have to give them something for 
diarrhoea. I have been obliged to keep 
them away from grapes, and I only feed 
them a couple of quarts at a time. As to 
mulberries, I haven't a mulberry tree on 
my farm, and consequently could not give 
you an intelligent answer to the question, 
but my opinion is that too many will 
work injury to'a flock of turkeys. 
Massachusetts. hokace w. macomber. 
Loss of Feathers. 
I have 34 Leghorn pullets laying well, 
perfectly healthy to all appearances, with 
the feathers all off behind, and seem to be 
getting more bare every day. I feed them 
a commercial scratch feed; charcoal, grit, 
and oyster shell before them all the time, 
plenty of mangels when they are not on 
range, sifted coal ashes for their dust bath. 
1 have never discovered lice or mites in 
my chicken house; they are made to exer¬ 
cise in six inches of litter and I give them 
fresh water twice a day. I have 15 White 
Wyandottes that get the same treatment; 
they have not lost any feathers and are 
doing well. L. F. k. 
New York. 
There are several causes 'for the loss of 
feathers such as you describe, including the 
irritation caused by the so-called depluming 
mite, and feather pulling by the hens them¬ 
selves. I have also seen it in flocks where 
there was no cause apparent. If a red¬ 
dened and scaly appearance of the skin in¬ 
dicates the presence of a mite at work, 
ordinary sulphur ointment may be rubbed 
into the bare spots, or, if close observation 
reveals the fact that the hens are pulling 
their own feathers, it is probably due to 
an abnormal craving caused by the lack of 
some animal or mineral matter in their 
food, and this craving may be satisfied by 
adding beef scrap, charcoal, and perhaps 
bone meal also, to their rations. Such a 
habit when once formed is apt to prove 
difficult to break up. and the hens should 
be turned loose on range as soon as possible 
where attention to other things will divert 
their attention from themselves. M. b. d. 
Egg=bound Hens, 
We have a flock of II. I. Reds and White 
and Barred Rocks. We feed boiled oats 
mixed with table scraps and commercial beef 
scraps for breakfast, and corn and scratch 
feed alternately every other day for supper; 
oyster shells and grit in front of them all 
the time. Drinking crock is kept perfectly 
clean. They have free range where they 
get plenty of green stuff, are quite fat. 
Some of them drag their hind parts and 
curl their tails between there legs, eat and 
drink well and seem to be healthy in every 
other way. I have been told they do not 
pass their eggs freely. Can you give a 
remedy for this trouble? i. e. p. 
Ohio. 
Your hens are evidently “egg bound" ; a 
condition often arising in fowls whose vital¬ 
ity has been somewhat lowered through 
heavy laying and an over-accumulation of 
fat. The remedy for this condition is to 
bring about increased physical vigor in the 
flock by proper feeding and attention to 
their exercise. If they are not on free j 
range, their grain should be fed in deep 
litter and the amount somewhat curtailed, 
while they should not be given too large a ; 
proportion of fat-forming material such as 
corn and buckwheat in their rations. 
Neither should they be foreed for egg pro¬ 
duction by too heavy feeding of meat in 
any form. With proper attention to their 
diet and exercise I think that you will 
readily overcome the trouble in your flock. 
M. B. D. 
Soft-shelled Eggs. 
Can you tell me how to prevent hens lay¬ 
ing soft-shelled eggs? .Some of mine have 
broken the egg inside them and I have had 
to kill them. The hens have free range 
and oyster shells at all times. For feed I 
give them about one quart to 25 hens of 
cracked corn in morning and at night equafi 
parts cornmeal and bran mixed with scrap¬ 
ings from table and boiled potato skins. 
They have milk now, all they want, in 
place of meat. Is lime water added to the 
drinking water of any use? MRS. j. r. 
bone meal, one part. If the chicks have 
some range this mash may be kept before 
them, dry, in hoppers or ‘in trays, but if 
they are closely confined there is some dan¬ 
ger that they will gorge themselves upon 
it if given the opportunity. m. b. d. 
Trouble with Chicks. 
Can anyone tell me what to do for my 
little chicks hatched from an incubator that 
appear to have blind staggers? This is my 
first experience. My chicks came out per¬ 
fect and well, but after a few days begin 
to stagger and fall and slowly die. I give 
thorn plenty of water, sand grit, bran and 
oatmeal, and chick food twice daily. 
a. ir. 
Without knowing far more than you tell 
of your conditions, it would be impossible 
for anyone to say what the trouble with 
your chicks is. The staggering and falling 
are evidences of weakness, the-first symp¬ 
toms of some evidently fatal trouble, but 
there is nothing characteristic about these 
symptoms to show what that trouble is. 
If you hatch a good percentage of strong 
chicks from your eggs, I should expect to 
find the trouble due to some external con¬ 
ditions surrounding the chicks after hatch¬ 
ing, rather than to inherited weakness or 
defective incubation, though either of these 
may be the source of the difficulty. See 
that your brooding conditions are right, and 
that your chicVo have sufficient warmth and 
ventilation w'- lout being either overheated 
or chilled; k>JK carefully for lice, which 
may infest even incubator hatched chicks, 
and note whether there are any evidences 
of white diarrhoea or other digestive trou¬ 
bles, shown by soiled fluff and pasting up 
behind. Only careful investigation along 
these lines will reveal the source of your 
difficulties. m. b. d. 
Excelsior and Pine Needles for Nests. 
Can any of our friends in the poultry 
business tell me whether excelsior and pine 
needles are good for giving a setting hen 
for hen nest? I have plenty of pine needles 
and some excelsior, but no hay, so would 
like to use the former if there is nothing 
objectionable in the odor. G. B. s. 
Tom’s River, N. J; 
Soft excelsior makes excellent nesting 
material, as hens do not scratch it all 
out of the nests in their search for seeds. 
I have never used pine needles, but can 
see no objection to them on the score of 
odor. However, in using either, as nests 
for sitting hens, I should place a good sod 
beneath as a eouserver of moisture. 
M. B. D. 
FOR TOPPING STOCK OFF 
BLATCHFORD’S 
PURE SUGAR AND FLAXSEED 
The richest, cleanest and healthiest supple¬ 
mental Food for Stock. 
Mixed with their ordinary feed it rapidly 
gets them into the very pink of condition. 
For Horses, Cattle, Hogs and Sheep its 
results are unsurpassed. 
Try it, it speaks for itself better than words. 
Sample 100-pound bag sent, freight paid, 
on receipt of $3.75. 
Blatchford’s Calf Meal Factory 
Waukegan, Illinois 
Established at Leicester, England, in 1800 
SAVE-THE-HORSE 
(Trade Mark Registered.) 
Put Horse to Work and Cure Him 
W E Originated the Plan of—Treating Horses by Mail—-Under 
Signed Contract to Return Money if Remedy Fails. OUR 
CHARGES ARE MODERATE. But first write describing your 
case, and we will send our—BOOK—Sample Contract, and Advice— 
ALL FREE to (Horse Owners and Managers). 
Write — as there is nothing so costly as delay. 
Hens that lay soft-shelled eggs, even 
though getting plenty of lime, are out of 
condition, and are usually over-fat. You 
are feeding a disproportionate amount of 
fat-forming material, such as cracked corn, 
cornmeal, and boiled potato skins, and I 
would suggest that you cut the latter en¬ 
tirely out of their rations, while reducing 
the amount of corn and meal fed by at 
least one-half, substituting therefor oats 
and wheat, wheat bran and middlings. 
Lime water is of no value if the fowls are 
getting plenty of lime in the shape of 
crushed oyster shells or old plaster. 
M. B. D. 
Dry Mash for Chicks. 
How soon will it do to feed chickens dry 
mash, as printed in the issue of The li. 
N.-Y. of September 2, 1911, for hens, con¬ 
sisting of two parts meat scrap, two parts 
Alfalfa meal, two parts wheat bran, two 
parts wheat middlings, one part gluten, 
one part cornmeal by weight? If this 
will not do could I use more bran with it 
for chickens? f. e. w. s. 
The dry mash made up as you describe 
may ho fed to chicks at any age after the 
first three days, though if given to chicks 
under eight weeks of age the meat scrap 
should be sifted to remove the larger pieces 
of bone and meat. The following mash, 
recommended by the Cornell Station, for 
young chicks, and fed both wet and dry, 
is perhaps superior to the formula that 
you have given. Wheat bran, three parts; 
cornmeal, three parts; wheat middlings, 
three parts; sifted beef scraps, three parts; 
TROY CHEMICAL CO., 24 Commercial Ave., Binghamton,H.Y. 
Druggists Everywhere sell Save-The-Horse 
With contract, or seat by us Express Prepaid. 
QUALITY 0 Owl Brand Cotton Seed Meal 
41 per cent Protein Minimum. 
Peed a balanced ration. Animals need protein. 
Get our free booklet, “Science of Feeding.” 
F. VV. BRODE * CO.Memphis, Tenn. 
NO HENS 
should be kept in your (*j flock. It is worse than 
money wasted; it is inhumane. Infected chickens can 
only lose you money. Why not keep your hen house 
clean, sanitary ( Make it conducive to health, vigor- 
egg production. Avcnarius Carbolineum will do it. 
Easily applied, permanent, cheap. Write today for 
free Bulletin on “ How To Keep Vermin Away.” 
CARBOLINEUM WOOD PRESERVING CO 
181 Franklin Street New York City 
S. C. WHITE LEGHORN chicks, 
10c; S. C. B. Orpington chicks, 15c- 
If over 4 are dead to each 100 
on reaching your station, I will 
make good the 
loss. Catalog 
on feeding and 
diseases free. 
C. M. LAUVER, 
15. 73, 
Richfield, Pa. 
R*ihv r , fiicL r c Thorn free range, selected S. C. 
DclUj V/nICI\S WHITE LEGHORNS, in 
any quantity. Safe arrival guaranteed. Cir¬ 
cular free. CHAS. R. STONE, Baby Chicken 
Farm, Staatsburg-ou-Hudson, N. Y. 
GENUINE KELLERSTRASS STRAIN 
Crystal White Orpington Eggs—ST00 per fifteen. 
I' rom one of Kellerstrass’ best pens. W. A. Kaiser, 
2703 Jamaica Avenue, Richmond Hill, L. 1. 
MARTBIV’S AMCONAS 
MARVELOUS WINTER LAYERS and BOSTON 
PRIZE WINNERS. CIRCULAR FREE. 
C. A. MARTIN.DERRY, N. H. 
j/ELLERSTRASS CRYSTAL WHITE ORPINGTON Eggs for 
IV Hatching, $1.00 per 15. A. NICHOLS, Chili, N.Y. 
core-™™ BUFF WYANDOTTE 
k VI VA VP eggs for sale—$1.00 for 15, $5.00 per 
100. CHAS. I. MILLER. K.F.D. No. 1. Hudson, N.Y. 
Oi Philo strain. I. C. Hawkins, Goshen, N. Y. 
WHITE WYANDOTTE 
Utility birds. Janies G.K.Duer, Port Jefferson Station,N.Y. 
nrninctnn EGGS, Baby Chicks—Buff. White, 
wi pillj^iuil mack. Prize winners, heavy lay¬ 
ers, farm bred. Annual Redaction Sale prices — 
Eggs, $2.50 per setting; two settings, $4.00; 50 eggs, 
$0.50; 100 eggs, $12.50. Baby Chicks—20c. each, lots 
of 50 or more; 25c. each lots of less than 50. Cata¬ 
logue. GRANNIS BROS., R. F. D. 3, La Granoeville, N. Y. 
fUIY— STRONG, healthy, liveable—hatched in 
either mammoth or small Incubators, and 
from superior free range stock—Single Comb 
White and Brown LEGHORNS—$0.50 up per 100. 
Capacity 100.000 chix. Illustrated Catalogue Free. 
TAYLOR’S POULTRY YARDS. Lyons, N. Y 
S. C. Black Orpingtons S 7 r S L ™en S d 
Mating list free. F. F. Andrew, Philadelphia, N.Y. 
pOLUMBlAN WYANDOTTES and MOTTLED ANCONAS- - 
U Great Winter Layers—bred for show and egg 
production. Eggs for hatching, $2.00 per fifteen. 
Incubator Eggs, $8.00 per hundred. WAYNE B. 
EISENHART, Box 29, Richland Center, Pa. 
on EGGS SI.00—Leading varieties, 52 breeds. Prizo Poul- 
AU try. Pigeons, Hares, etc. Booklet free. Large illus¬ 
trated descriptive Catalog 10c. F. G. WILE, Telford, Pa. 
BARRED ROCKS-fSMS” ,«'» 
4’ 6r 15: J. 4 - 50 P er ,W) - CHAS. T. 
DOWNING, Route 2, West Chester. Pa. 
White Wyandottes llVn^yeaTS^L^ 
white, healthy birds. Customers praise their win¬ 
ter laying. Free range. Have won for six years. 
Eggs: 100—$5.00; setting. $1.00. Chick feeding for¬ 
mula with order. WILLIAM D. BURR, Fairfield, Conn. 
BARRFD ROCKS' - ®" 88 fl0m flee range, fine 
DAIVACD nULIYO largo, utility chickens. 
Bleeding stocic trom hen-hatched free range chick- 
ens, 90# fertility guaranteed—$1.50 hundred, 75c. 
setting. EUGENE D. HALL, Doe Run, Chester County, Pa. 
ftUSTOM HATCHING—S3.00 a compartment in our HALL 
U MAMMOTH INCUBATORS. Each compartment holds 150 
etjps. S. C. W. Leghorn Hatching Eggs for sale—SI .50 per 
setting; SB.00 per hundred. S. C. W. Leghorn 0AY-0LD 
CHICKS—S15.00 per hundred; S130 per thousand. See our 
Swine ad. MAPLE GLEN POULTRY FARM, MILLERTON, N.Y. 
Rio- Rarrpfl Rnrk<; Best market poultry, s. c. 
P'o e r , nU , U 1 l ' b li-1- Reds, great layers; eggs 
that will hatch—$2 per 13, $3 per 26. Rock Cockerels 
and J. allots for sale. A Sensible System of Poultry 
Keeping, free. Lambert’s Poultry Farm, Apponaug, R. 1. 
0 C. WHITE LEGHORNS— Hatching Eggs from selected 
'D winter layers, $1.00 per 15. Low prices on larger 
orders. MAPLE GROVE FARM, Smithville, N.Y. 
D ARRED ROCKS, Runner Ducks, Layers & Prize VVin- 
U ners. Eggs. $2 a setting. Nelson’s, Grove City, Pa. 
QPFflAI Eggs for hatching from 
OI r IULGO 60() fr00 rallget finely 
bred S. O. W. Leghorns. Special prices on largo 
orders. Also Indian Rnnner Duck Eggs. It. C. 
LAWRENCE, R. I)., Poughkeepsie, N. Y. 
HATCHING EGGS from Trap-Nested, Bred-to-Lay 
II W. P. Rocks, $6.00 per 100. From best mating, 
$2.00 tor fifteen. A. S. BRIAN, Alt. Kisco, N. Y. 
Farm Bred Poultry 
OF SHOW QUALITY 
TTarred Rocks Partridge Cochins 
White Rocks Partridge Wyandottes 
500 Selected Birds in Our Breeding Yards 
$1.50, $2.00 mid $3.00 per setting. 
L»U w $7.50 to $15.00 per lmndretl 
MIHJCH BROS. 
BRIDGETON, /V. J. 
MADISON SQUARE GARDEN 'iSS 
PRIZE-WINNING STRAINS UR,Y 1 
dottes, Barred Rocks, Eggs $1.50—15; Imported 
Light and Dark Brahmas, Eggs $2.50—15. Catalog 
gratis. F. M. PRESCOTT. Riverdnle. N. J. 
DA8Y CHICKS—From large, mature S. 0. Wliito 
0 Leghorns, on freo range; Young’s strain; 
hatches average 65#: big, stocky chicks, 10c. each. 
Safe arrival guaranteed. Eggs, $6 per 100. Arthur 
H. Penny, Oak Grove Squab Farm, Riverliead, N.Y. 
FJUFF ROCK 8 WHITE LEGHORN EGGS for HATCHING; 
8=0 purebred. $1.00 setting of 15. Satisfaction 
guaranteed. HOWARD SUnON, Fairmount, N. J. 
S, C, White Leghorn BABY CHICKS 
and HATCHING EGGS. Froe range, farm bred 
stock of quality. No order too large or too small. 
“CHICKS THAT MAKE GOOD." Circular. 
VANCREST POULTRY FARM, Salt Point, Dutchess Co., N.Y, 
Ciiani Rrnn 7 P turkey eggs, $ 3.00 pet- 10 . 
uicuu oi uiue R c R L Red $10l) 15> 
Indian Runner Ducks, $1.00 per 10. Write 
H. J. VAN DYKE.GETTYSBURG, Pa. 
S, C, WHITE LEGHORNS SKU'aiy 
Orders booked for future delivery. Young and old 
stock at attractive prices. Best laying strains. 
SUNNY HILL FARM, Flemington, N. J. 
TURKEY EGGS—U. Reds, M. B. Narragansctt and White Hollands. 
1 Yard No. I, all breeds, $3 for 12; yard No. 2, all breeds, $2.50 
for 12. 1». 1*. Rock8, R. I. Reds anti S. C. Blk. Minorcan’ Eggs 85 
cents for 15, $ t for lOOj Mammoth Pekin, I. R. Duck Eggs $1 for 13. 
VV. R. CARLE, - - R, F. I). 1, Jacob*burg, Ohio. 
WHITE HOLLAND TURKEYS 
Walnut Hill Stock Farm 
NATHANIEL BACON, Manager, Talcott, W. Va. 
EGGS FOR HATCHING 
lific laying strain of S. C. W. LEGHORNS—$0.00 
per 100. Limited number of eggs from extra choieo 
matings of W. P. Rocks, W. Wyandottes and W. 
Orpingtons—$2.00 per 15. Ninety per cent fertility 
and safe delivery of all orders guaranteed. A trial 
order will convince you. EVERGREEN POUL¬ 
TRY FARM, Chappnqua, Westchester Co., N.Y. 
THE FARMER S FOWL—Rose Comb Reds, best winter 
1 layers on earth. Eggs. $1.00 per 15. Catalogue 
free. 1HOS. WILDER, Route 1, Richland, N. Y. 
Austins’ s. c. it. i. kicks standard, trap- 
nested, record stork. Cockerels, pullets, hens, eggs, mating 
list. AUSIINS’ POULTRY FARM. Box 17, Centre Harbor, N. H. 
Chisks, Ducklings & Hatching Eggs 
Now Ready from Selected Breeders. 
S. C. W. Leghorns—Barred Plymouth Rocks. 
S. C. R. I. Reds Imperial Pekin Ducks. 
300 Breeding Ducks. Also a few BARRED 
ROCK. COCKERELS at right prices. 
BONNIE BRAE POULTRY FARM.NEW ROCHELLE, N. Y. 
Hone’s Rose Comb Reds 
and superior layers of large brown eggs. Hatching 
eggs from tested layers and Schenectady and Al- 
bany winners. A satisfactory hatch guaranteed. 
D. R. HONE, Crescent Hill Farm, Sharon Sprinus, N. Y. 
R. 1. Reds, Houdans, Indian Runner Ducks 
Hifrb-ci a ss stock for UTILITY, SHOW or EX- 
Lr Fr * A f?T tc *J* n &. Mating list on request. 
SINCLAIR SMITH, G02 Fifth St., Brooklyn, N.Y. 
a_J 1 1 dT Hatching Eggs, Wyckoff 
W ■ B 1 W White Leghorn Ringlet 
Barred Rocks, Brown Leghorns, live other breeds, 
raised from superior free range stock; capacity 
1UU.0U0; strong, liveable chicks; safe arrival 
guaranteed. Illustrated catalogue free. TAY¬ 
LORS POULTRY YARDS, LYONS, N. Y. 
ORIZE-WINNING S. C. REDS, Indian Runner 
Ducks, White Orpington Barred Rocks—Eggs 
and Chicks. David M. Hammond, Route 5, Cortland, N.Y. 
R a U v S - O.W. Leghorns, Barred 
vlllCtto Rocks, R. C. Rods. Strong, 
livable. From vigorous, thoroughbred, rango 
breeders. Safe delivery guaranteed. Circular 
free. WESLEY GRINNKLL, Solus, N. Y. 
DAVIS S. C. R. I. REDS 
200 EGG STRAIN 
DAY OLD CHIX—Chix that live and grow hatched 
in Mammoth Incubators. 
EGGS FOR HATCHING—Eggs from vigorous, 
fresh-air housed stock. 
Place your orders for Chix now and get positive 
dato of delivery. Safe arrival guaranteed. 
Circular Free. 
DAVIS POULTRY FARM . . . BERLIN, Mass. 
C C. WHITE LEGHORNS, the large white kind, bred 
O* for heavy laying. Hatching eggs, little Chicks, 
breeding stock. Estab. 1904. Price List mailed. 
Abovo Poultry Farms Co., Inc., Chatham, Morris Co., N.J. 
Maple Cove Poultry Farms A t IL°: 2 £;,. 
Eggs and Baby Chicks from mature breeders of 
exhibition quality, in S,C. White Leghorns, Wyan¬ 
dottes, Rocks & Emden Geoso; R.I. Rods, P.Cochins, 
B. Rocks and B. Leghorns. Breeders at all times. 
INDIAN RUNNERS-White Eggs Only 
First-class Eggs for Hatching from fawn and white, 
pencilled, and English Walton strains. All stock 
is pure, vigorous and prolific. Breeders kept under 
natural conditions, produce eggs that hatch, thrive 
ami grow. Baby Duck culture free with egg order. 
VVrito for prices and Free Mating List. 
CHERRY HILL FARM-l’ittstown, N. J. 
DUFF WHITE LEGHORNS -S. C. R. 1. Red Eggs, 90c. per 
D 15. $1.50 per 30, $2.75 per 60, $4.00 per 100. Cata¬ 
logue free. JOHN A. ROTH, Qnakertown, 4’a. 
A Bargains. C. White Leghorn Eggs 
$5.00 per 100. Homestead Farms, R. 1, Lestershire, N. Y. 
HOGS and P0ULTRY-“7£S„ p £ 
ner Duck Lggs, White and Brown Leghorn Eggs 
Pfllll TRYMFN—Send 2c stamp for Illustrated 
rwu *“' *■ 1 Catalog describing 35 varieties. 
EAST DONEGAL POULTRY YARDS MARIETTA, PA. 
BIG ROUEN and INDIAN srJK 
Barred Plymouth Rocks and Rose Comb Black 
Minorcas. Eggs from Madison Square Garden, 
I aterson and Morristown winners. $3 per 15, $5 
per 30. CLARK FARM, Boonton, New Jersey. 
MacKellar’s Charcoal 
For Poultry is best. Coarse or fine granulated, also 
powdered. Buy direct from largest manufacturers ol 
Charcoal Products. Ask for prices and samples. Est. 1814 
R. MacKELLAR’S SONS CO., Peekskill.N.Y. 
Be a Clam I 
A ^.^LAIR man remarked the other day, “I know where Darlington is, all right; it is an old 
/“\ fashioned place that is good to get out of.” Yes, Darlington is old fashioned; our grand¬ 
mothers had a rule—they called it the GOLDEN RULE (probably now obsolete in Court 
House Square). It is still good in Darlington. Our bushel does not have to be weighed, We sleep 
with our doors unlocked and our latch strings are always out. OUR girls (God bless ’em) are like 
their grandmothers—and our grandmothers made the men sit up and think. Our men are as homely 
as a stone fence. Yes, wo are old fashioned; thank God there is ono place loft that is. A Belair 
stdnmng on a store porch six miles out from Darlington, and seeing the carriages go by, said, 
Whose funeral is that V His friend remarked, “Don’t you see how pleasant the people look; that 
is not a funeral; they are Belair people going over to see. the DARLINGTON EGG FARM.” We 
aro also glad to see pleasant people. If you come with a smile (and don’t como without it), the 
fault will be ours if you don t go back with a grin. 
There is not much old fashioned about the DARl.TNGTO NT EGGT 
FARM. You will see 1,000 Breeding Hens in one house and one 
floek. You will see the MAMMOTH HOT WATER MACHINE 
hatching Chicks for you. You will see a unique brooder house, 
36 hovers in two tiers. You can get Eggs lor Hatching that 
for size would make an ostrich blush, testing over 92^ fertile. j 
You can get Baby Chicks that live. And if your credentials aro | 
all right, see one or two Darlington girls. 
DARLINGTON EGG FARM • . Alfred P. Edge , • Box O, Darlington , Md. j 
