The RURAL NEW-YORKER 
1523 
EGG-LAYING CONTEST 
Vineland, N. J. 
WEEK ENDING SEPTEMBER 25, 1919. 
This contest is now in its third year, 
the pens being occupied by selected pul¬ 
let progeny from the birds in these pens 
the two previous years—first as pullets 
and second as mature hens. 
BARRED PLYMOUTH ROCKS 
1st yr. 2d yr.Wk.Tot’l 
Garret W. Buck. N. J. 
1956 
1366 
39 
2041 
Thomas Henry, Pa. 
1548 
1192 
33 
1623 
Otto C. Luhrs, N. J. 
1474 
1245 
21 
1570 
C. N. Myers, Pa. 
1689 
1488 
29 
1804 
Harry H. Ober, N. J. 
1443 
1533 
21 
1708 
Overlook Farm, N. J. 
1199 
1291 
17 
D62 
George O. Ward, Me. 
1459 
1381 
23 
1733 
Woodside Farm, R. I. 
1867 
837 
49 
1981 
WHITE PLYMOUTH ROCKS 
Chester P. Dodge, Mass. 
1635 
1060 
35 
1638 
Hollistou Hill Poul. Fm.,Mass. 
1985 
1176 
17 
1817 
Edward E. Murray, N. Y . 
1573 
1035 
29 
1339 
Victors. Reicheubach, Pa. 
1038 
,899 
24 
1365 
Overlook Farm, N. .1. 
1602 
1137 
30 
1513 
Wilburtlia Poultry Farm N. J.. 
1214 
994 
. . 
997 
COLUMBIAN PLYMOUTH ROCKS 
Deptford Poultry Farm, N. J.. 
1447 
1245 
17 
1568 
T. J. Euslin. N. .1. 
1302 
nil 
38 
1371 
J. M. Jones, N. J. 
1854 
1272 
43 
156J 
WHITE WYANDOTTES 
Thomas Coates, N.Y . 
1445 
1173 
34 
1776 
A. H. Faulkner, N. J . 
1412 
1044 
19 
1220 
Thomas Henry, Pa. 
1322 
1123 
38 
1649 
Gablewood Poultry Farm, N. J. 
1598 
1288 
27 
1511 
Lnsscroit Farm, N. J . 
1761 
1266 
39 
2044 
E. C. Moore, N. J. 
1485 
1215 
20 
1329 
T. H. Matieson & Son, R. 1. 
1410 
1090 
39 
1761 
SunnybrookFarm, N. J. 
1460 
1263 
12 
1234 
H. S. Tuthill. N. J.... 
1721 
1598 
31 
1342 
COLUMBIAN WYANDOTTES 
Lake Farm, R. I. 
1513 
1193 
23 
1291 
Sunnybrook Farm, N. J . 
1483 
1223 
28 
1376 
WUburthu Poultry Farm, N. J. 
1253 
1069 
19 
1588 
BUFF WYANDOTTES 
Clark aud Howland, Vt. 
1591 
836 
37 
1316 
W. P. Laing, N. J. 
897 
919 
17 
1634 
Mrs O. B. Elliott N. J. 
1279 
1009 
23 
1098 
B. C. RHODE ISLAND REDS 
Belle Ellen Stock Farm, N. J. . 
1522 
964 
26 
1444 
H. W. Collingwood, N. J. 
1425 
1325 
3 
1504 
Thomas W. Dawson, Pa. 
1410 
1231 
25 
1338 
Etjou Poultry Farm. N. J. 
1479 
1153 
11 
1283 
Thomas Henry. Pa. 
1522 
1193 
13 
1481 
Miss A. S. Macintosh, X. J. 
1635 
1345 
33 
1650 
Underhill Bros., N.,1. 
1966 
1275 
40 
2270 
Woodland Poultry Yard. Pa.... 
1082 
891 
20 
1534 
8. C. WHITE LEGHORNS 
Avalon Farms, Conn. 
1937 
1451 
32 
2010 
E. A. Ballard, Pa. 
1843 
1704 
24 
1868 
Will Barron, England. 
2053 
1509 
35 
2044 
Belle Ellen Stock Farm, N. J.. 
1425 
1128 
19 
1892 
Broad Brook Farm, N. Y . 
1698 
1485 
18 
1544 
Cloverlawn Farm, N. J. 
1734 
1540 
21 
1895 
W. J. Cocking, N. J. 
1674 
1409 
19 
1650 
Jos. H. Cohen, N. J . 
1730 
1489 
33 
1816 
J. S. Cray & Son, N. J . 
1649 
1362 
32 
2063 
Chits. Daval, Jr., N. J . 
1728 
1527 
36 
1810 
L. S. & N. L. Depue, N. J . 
1714 
1061 
15 
1416 
R, F. & R. A. Earle, N. J. 
1595 
1250 
33 
1922 
Harry G. Gardiner, N. J. 
1772 
1438 
16 
1578 
C. 8. Greene, N. J. 
1772 
1308 
26 
2168 
Wells S. Hastings. Conn. 
1742 
1244 
27 
1875 
B. Frank Grunzig, N. J. 
1277 
1089 
33 
1643 
Henry E. Heine, N. J. 
1622 
1373 
36 
2009 
Richard Heine, N. J. 
1527 
1141 
20 
1796 
Heigl's Poultry Farm. Ohio- 
1616 
1113 
14 
1896 
Hilltop Poultry Yards,Conn_ 
1774 
1221 
30 
1745 
Hillview Farm. Mo. 
1436 
1362 
23 
1673 
Hollistou Hill Poul. Fin., Mass. 
2114 
1489 
12 
1267 
Piueheach Poultry Faint, N. J.. 
1412 
1368 
43 
2161 
James F. Harrington, N. J. 
1719 
1573 
31 
1846 
Joint R. Lander, N. J . 
1851 
1776 
35 
1980 
Lnywell Poultry Fanil, Conn... 
1867 
1243 
19 
2124 
Fred J. Mathews, N. J. 
1755 
1619 
40 
2167 
Mercer Poultry Farm, N. J. 
1612 
1445 
13 
1637 
Merrythought Farm, Conn. 
1673 
1331 
16 
1797 
H. H. Myers, N. J. 
1843 
1492 
37 
2073 
Samuel Niece & Son. N. J. 
1851 
1464 
■)■> 
1904 
Oak Hill Estate, Fa.. 
1635 
1462 
38 
1812 
Thomas Henry, Pa. 
1117 
1538 
28 
2078 
1 taklaml Farm. N. J. 
1655 
1239 
19 
1868 
Miss Anna C. Patty, Pa. 
1526 
1295 
13 
1759 
P. G. Platt, Pa. 
2173 
1690 
29 
2158 
Riverside F.gg Farm. N. Y. 
1815 
1434 
24 
1802 
Joseph 11. Ralston, N.J . 
1614 
1404 
27 
1741 
Shadowhrook Farm. Conn. 
1630 
1243 
18 
1527 
Sloan's Egg Farm, N. J. 
1666 
1462 
31 
1776 
Pinehurst Poultry Farm, Pa.... 
1884 
1368 
20 
2157 
Herman F. Sonder, N.J. 
1802 
1456 
5 
1864 
A . E. Spear, N. J. 
1716 
1376 
34 
1705 
Sunnybrook Farm, N. J. 
1353 
1159 
8 
1735 
Tenacre Poultry Farm, N.J- 
1312 
1260 
27 
1813 
l'oni's Poultry Fanu.N. J. 
1702 
1474 
22 
1950 
Training School, N. J. 
1535 
1104 
•» 
1572 
J. Percy Van Zainlt, N. .1. 
2212 
1471 
30 
2085 
Shuns and Voegtleu, N.J . 
2115 
1282 
28 
1821 
1883 
1310 
28 
1925 
White House Poultry Fill., N. J . 
1489 
1452 
17 
1881 
W. K. Wixson, Pa. 
1959 
1714 
43 
1851 
VVlIlanna Farm, N.J. 
1915 
1559 
18 
1772 
Woodland Farms, N. J . 
1896 
1462 
33 
1997 
8. C. BUFF LEGHORNS 
H. G. Richardson, N.J. 
1448 
1029 
24 
1313 
Romy Singer, N.J. 
1137 
1098 
22 
1750 
Monmouth Farms, N.J. 
1407 
1293 
13 
1490 
S. C. BLACK LEGHORNS 
A, E. Hampton. N.J. 
1746 
1398 
20 
1851 
Fred C. Nixon, N.J. 
1758 
1227 
5 
1693 
Sunny Acres, N.J. 
1754 
1288 
7 
1246 
Totals. 161875 129488 2485 171U80 
Cheapening Poultry Mash 
I am paying $4.15 a hundred for poul¬ 
try mash. Can you make up a cheaper 
feed using the following. I want to use 
as few feeds as possible, but want a good 
mixture: 
Cornmeal .$4.(X) 
Bran . 2.75 
Wheat middlings .8.25 
Mixed feeds (mids and bran).. .*>.10 
Wheat . 4.00-4.30 
Cottonseed meal .4.05 
Gluten .3.70 
Buckwheat .. 5.00 
Beef scrap . 4 SO 
Barley . 3.90 
Oats . 3.05 
Connecticut. F. c. B. 
An excellent mash can be made from 
the feeds that you mention for S3 59 or 
even less. A mixture of equal parts of 
cornmeal. wheat bran, wheat middlings, 
ground oats, gluten feed and beef scrap 
could hardly be improved upon, and. ac¬ 
cording to the prices submitted, this 
would cost the above mentioned figure. 
If desired to cheapen it still further, less 
beef scrap might be used. Instead of one- 
sixth part beef scrap, one-seventh might 
be added and, by most po' ltrymen would 
be considered sufficient. il. B. D. 
Use of Shrunken Wheat 
I enclose sample of wheat. I can buy 
this wheat for .$1 per bu (measure). It 
weighs 41 or 42 lbs to bushel. I can buy 
old wheat, weighing GO lbs to bushel, at 
$2.10. Which of the two will be more 
profitable for me to buy for White Leg¬ 
horn layers, and why? g. s. b. 
Ohio. 
This seems to me an excellent grade 
of shrunken wheat, probably worth quite 
as much, pound for pound, as high grade 
wheat for animal feeding. At 40 lbs. to 
the bushel, it will cost you $2.50 per 
hundred, while the sound wheat will cost 
you $3.50 per hundred; a clear saving 
of a dollar or a little better per 100 lbs. 
Shrunken wheat is often richer in pro¬ 
tein than wheat of good quality, and at. 
least equally desirable for poultry feed¬ 
ing- M. B. D. 
Grain Mixture for Hens 
In what proportions shall I mix the 
following grains for hens—buckwheat, 
oats, sunflower seed and cracked corn— 
to make a good laying feed. Should I 
buy something else? I have just begun 
in the hen business and raised these 
grains for them this year. j. n. T. 
New York. 
Your home-grown grains will furnish 
the scratch grain that you need, and 
they might be mixed in equal parts of 
corn and buckwheat, to which could be 
added as much oats as the hens will 
consume without waste and a little sun¬ 
flower seed. Exact proportions are not 
essential, but the corn and buckwheat will 
be relished by the hens, the oats are good 
so far as the hens will eat them, and the 
sunflower seed may be added in small 
quantities as a relish. It is not worth 
while to have the corn cracked, each hen 
carries her own mill. In addition to 
these whole grains, you should provide 
a mash of ground grains. Equal parts 
by weight of cornmeal. ground oats, wheat 
middlings, wheat bran, gluten feed, ground 
buckwheat and beef scrap might be used, 
or the ground buckwheat might be omitted 
and the beef scrap correspondingly re¬ 
duced in amount to make about' one- 
seventh of the mixture. This mash dry 
and kept in hoppers open to the fowls ail 
of the time should be supplemented by a 
feeding night and morning of as much of 
the mixed whole grain as the hens will 
readily clean up. Grit, crushed oyster 
shell and green or vegetable food should 
also be provided. yj. b. d. 
Building a Poultry Plant 
We have bought 35 acres and will move 
this fall. We shall build an incubator 
for about 20.000 eggs, and henhouses to 
house 1.000 I-reghorns. Would you advise 
us to have aH of our hens under one roof? 
io-i build 12 colony houses about 
12x14 ft. Will you please give us the 
names of experiment poultry stations that 
have bulletins ou poultry equipment? We 
will build about from 20 to 22 ft wide 
and from 100 to 200 ft. long. Will have 
a shed roof. We want all the informa¬ 
tion that we can get before we build. 
Ohio. BROOKFIELD POULTRY FARM. 
The question of one or more buildings 
is largely one of convenience ; 1,000 hens 
under one roof can be cared for more 
easily than if they were scattered through 
several buildings, and the one building 
can be divided into as many compart¬ 
ments as are desired. The practice upon 
large plants, however, is to carry flocks 
of at least several hundred fowls together. 
The colony houses should be so built that 
they can be moved by team from one part 
of the plant to another. 
The State Experiment Stations at Cor¬ 
nell University. Ithaca, N. Y., New’ 
Brunswick, N. J., Storrs, Conn., and 
probably your own at Wooster, publish 
valuable bulletins upon poultry buildings. 
You will fiud a variety of ideas in the 
bulletins and will do well to compare 
them and then use your own judgment as 
to what is best adapted to your needs. 
M. B. D. 
Ailing Geese 
I a in a "city person,” just starting in 
with poultry and a small garden, about 
an acre. We intend to branch out a little 
when we have learned more. We have 
done well with everything except some 
geese. I started with nine baby geese, 
took good care of them according to the 
instructions in the Government booklet. 
All did well hut three ; they ate well like 
the rest, but one at a time got. lame, then 
the wing ou the same side would droop, 
and in a few days the goose would lie 
down and die. 1 have lost three that way. 
The other six are big, husky fellows, but 
the other morning I noticed one wing 
droopiug on one. It has not become any 
worse, hut I would like to know if you 
could give me the cause and remedy for 
this. I feed them once a day; at night I 
throw them scratch feed, the same as the 
chickens: let them out to grass all day, 
and provide fresh water for them. I 
would also like to hear from someone who 
has raised turkeys in a small way. I 
would like to start with a few next Spring. 
We have plenty of room for them to range, 
as the nearest house to me is about one- 
fourth mile. MRS. F. S. 
New York. 
The cause, or causes, of this lameness 
or paralysis in chicks are obscure. A re¬ 
cent discussion in the poultry department 
of Snc England Farms, however, revealed 
the belief of some experienced poultrymen 
that intestinal worms in large numbers 
were responsible for the numerous cases 
of leg weakness and loss of use of other 
muscles that so often occur in apparently 
healthy flocks. If this is true of chicks 
it is also quite likely true of goslings, and 
I would suggest that you hold a careful 
post mortem upon a dead gosling, exam¬ 
ining the interior of the intestinal tract 
for the presence of worms in sufficient 
numbers to cause clogging or other serious 
results. If worms of any sort are present 
in any considerable numbers, you will 
have no trouble iu finding them. A stand¬ 
ard remedy for worms is a teaspoonful or 
more of turpentine, either given alone or 
mixed with an equal quantity of some oil. 
This can most readily be given through a 
soft rubber catheter passed carefully down 
to the bird’s crop. A small glass syringe 
may be used to hold the turpentine and 
inject it through the catheter. M. B. d. 
Warts On Teats 
Is there anything you can suggest that 
will cure warts ou a cow t ’s teats? I have 
a young heifer, and one of her teats is 
covered with them, which makes it hard 
to milk. IT. A. S. 
Connecticut. 
Twice daily freely apply a solution of 
bicarbonate of soda (baking soda) eon* 
taining all that hot water will dissolve. 
This is termed a saturated solution and 
it has been found fully more effective than 
best castor oil, which commonly is applied 
to remove wart.s on a cow’s teats. Snip 
off warts that have narrow necks, a few 
at a time, and next day apply a little 
pine tar, but such treatment tends to 
make the teat sore, unless the work is 
judiciously done. 
Swollen Knees 
I have a cow that has a large swelling 
on both knees. Her legs are not stiff iu 
the knee. What can I do to Temove 
swelling? h. a. w. 
Maine. 
We assume that the swellings are soft 
and therefore filled with serum. If so 
they have resulted from bruising upon the 
floor or manger in the stable. This fre¬ 
quently happens when stanchioned cows 
kneel and reach for feed in the alleyway. 
The popular treatment among cowmen is 
to run a tape seton down through the 
cyst or sac. smear the tape with turpen¬ 
tine or blistering salve and pull it up and 
down several times a day to cause a flow 
of serum. The tape must be renewed 
once a week, until discharge ceases. It is 
much better, however, to have the sac 
opened at its lowest part, the serum and 
clots of blood or fibrin removed, partitions 
or adhesions broken down and tincture of 
iodine injected by the surgeon. Afterward 
he will pack the cavity with antiseptic 
gauze or oakum saturated with a mixture 
of equal parts of turpentine and raw lin¬ 
seed oil and apply a bandage. The paek- 
insr should then be renewed once daily 
until it no longer can be inserted. A tag 
of the oakum is left hanging out of the 
wound to serve as a drain. 
For Sale—60 Colonies Italian Bees 
PULLETS and COCKERELS 
W E ARE offering at attractive prices a very 
fine lot of early hatched S. C. White Leghorn 
Breeding Cockerels of the same blood lines as our 
Vineland PenlNo. 54 which has an official record 
of 2,168 eggs at the end of the 47th week and 
which is the highest Leghorn pen in the three East¬ 
ern Egg Laying Contest at this time. Also 200 May 
hatched pullets of same breeding at $2.50 each. 
Lakewood Leghorn Farm 
C. S. Greene, Prop. 
LAKEWOOD, - NEW JERSEY 
WhiteLeghorn Hens $ i.75 
Two hundred choice birds left from dock of one 
thousand. Wyckoff strain. Selling out entirely. 
C. 1. HEEK.ES, Royal Oak, Talbot Co., Maryland 
FOR SALE 
100 year-old S. C. W. 
„ . ^ . Leghorn hens,Wyckoff 
Strain, &.00 each. j. M . CASE. Gllb oa, N. Y. 
WhiteLsghornPullets 
Light Brahma®. 
FOREST FARM. Rockaway, N. J. 
White Leghorn Pullets forest h 
S R W I oohnrn Yearlings,«: runets. SJ. 50 . Heavy lav 
n.LSgllUIII ing strain. EL BRITON FARM, Darlington, Md, 
AREYOU SATISFIED 
With the amount of eggs your Leghorns are producing i 
If not. we can send you some that will satisfy you. Our 
birds are pure BARRON Leghorns bred from many gen¬ 
erations of trap-nested and pedigreed stock. We have 
several hundred early hatched pedigreed cockerels bred 
from carefully selected trap-nested hens with records 
from 175 to 268. Priced according to pedigree and quality. 
All stock guaranteed as represented or money refunded. 
THE RIVERSIDE POULTRY FARM. Cambridge Springs. Pa. 
SALE Choice Rose Comb Anconas 
Cockerels. Sheppard Strain. «S4 Each. 
ALLEN H. DAVIS - Newman, New York 
Blue Andalusian Cockerels 
From Hens That Do Lay, S3. 
I). S. REDNER, Forest of Dean, Fort Montgomery, N.Y. 
Light Brahma Hans, $3 aacb iCAJWSEW. 
GERMOZONE Stock Remedy 
For Poultry, Pigeon*. Dogs, Cats, Rabbits, Parrots, Canary and 
other birds or pet animals, Germozone is a universal and safe 
remedy; for eolds, snuffles, roup, sore throat, loss of voice or sing¬ 
ing, influenza, bowel trouble, distemper .sore eyes or ears, canker, 
gleet, loss of fur or feathers, sores, wounds, skin disease,—or other 
affections of skin or mucous membrane. 
“My hens have never done so well as this year and haven’t 
lost a single chick”—Mrs Flora Kapple, Walker, la. “Simply 
grand for rabbits ’*—L.W. Browning. Boone. Ia. “Cannot praise 
Germozone enough. I use it for chickens, stock and household” 
••Mrs. Win. Hoeppel, Hugo. Okla. “My bird puppus don’t 
know what distemper is and I never had such good success 
before with chicks’’—Curly Smith. Kennett. Mo. 
Germozone is sold by most drug, seed and poultry supply dealers, 
or mailed postpaid in 25c, 75c and $1.50 packages from Omaha. 
Book on treatment of diseases free with each package. 
GEO. H. LEE CO. Dept. 463 OMAHA, HEB. 
RABBITS 
48 Prize Winners Up To This Date in 1919 
I created over one thousand new fanciers and breed¬ 
ers in 1919, selling them honest foundation stock. 
R. R. Belgians, Flemish Giants, 
Dutch, English and American Blues 
This gives you an opportunity to start right. As 
the offspring of quality is more likely to produce 
quality than is the offspring of poor stock. 
Satisfaction Guaranteed or Money Refunded 
JOSEPH BLANK 
Official Registrar of the N. B. and F. Ass. of A. 
DEPT. A 
428 Highland Ave. Mount Vernon, N.Y. 
BABBITS —I leg. Siberian and Flemisn crossed roting. for 
n sale, cheap. Stamp. MAKtisKET WOOD, lllpley, Maine 
Belgian Flemish Giants 
Breeding and yonng stock. Also some Guinea pies. 
F1NKE RABBIT FARM . Ravena, N.Y. 
Must Sell my Entire Stock JtfKf JftySSj 
Breeding does and young: stock. Write your wants. 
BRUOKS1DE POULTRY FA RM, Stockton, N. J. 
if RorlnppH Prinac Young and old. Belgian Hares, 
Ml nOUUbBU r rices New Zealand Reds, Flemish Giants 
P*KS. Price list and circular for stamps. 
N. SPOOR, - - Ravena, New York 
Belgian Hares Flemish Giant huckt, ex 
■ —--— ti n fine, large health; 
bmos. ohi, $5 perpair: $8 for trio. Orderfron 
this adv. or enclose stamp for further information 
Mrs. C. R. WATERMAN. R. F. D. No. 1. Worcester. N Y 
B ELGIAN HARES—Rufus Reds—Bred Does 
$5.00; Bucks $3.00: Youngsters $3 00 Pair. $5.00 
Trio. STANLEY STEINER, AKRO N, N. Y. 
For SaJe-BLACK SIBERIAN HARES 4t ou c n f 
only. Apply W. J. WHEBLE, 424 Princeton Rd., Fitchburg, Mats, 
POULTRY 
Barron’s White Wyandottes cockerels, pu net sand 
imported direct witli records. E. 
n* for snle from stock 
E. LEWIS. Apalacbin, M. Y. 
For Sale-White Wyandotte Cockerels hatched, 
from Tom Barron (English strain.) Vigorous stock. $3.50 
each. W. M. Kirkpatrick, R. 5«. l, Lexington, Va. 
Cockerels 
from frap-nented stock. 8 . C. and 
!. C. Reds. White flr £7 _$-1 A 
.eghornn . . vw v* vlv 
Winning Reds at Storrs. 1918. Now leading R. C» 
Reus at Delaware. GLENHOPE FARM, Pittsfield, Mass. 
Black Jersey Giants 
Free descriptive circular. A discount of 25% on all 
orders for eggs and chicks for spring delivery re¬ 
ceived by us before January 1st, 1920. 
SUSSEX FARM, R. R. 2, Belmar, N. J. 
Tnnlniioa finoeo Trio > Gander and two Geese, S12, 
I OU1OUS0 U8886 E. A. BENNETT, 5LuVAS(jtjA.v, N. J. 
Bred to Lay White Rock Pullets 
12 now laying, including 2nd pen, at Barnstable, 
$60. 12 to lay Oct. 15th, with 2nd cockerel, $48. 
25 to lay Nov. lst-15, 875. Cockerels. 86 each. 
THE HOMESTEAD FARM - Yarmouthport, Mass. 
B ARRED ROCKS. Some selected well-barred cockerels for sale, bred 
from pen* headed by pedigreed male bird* from 292 to 27-i-e?c 
hens. Satisfaction Guaranteed. C. W. I H. J. Eckkart, Shohola, P*. 
Full Blooded Barred Rock 
cock and cockerels from 82.50 to 85. 
Mrs. PEARL CUDDEBACK - Skaneateles, New York 
65 Choice Imperial Ringlet B. P. Rock Cockerels 
85, 810 and 825 each. Exhibition specimens. 
Ancona and Utility B. P. Rock Pullets. Satisfaction 
Guaranteed. E. R. HUMMER & C0. t Frenchtown, N. J. 
ForSalo- T £J;"y Oak Hill Estate 
consisting of 4 contest pens, 250 yearling hens. 19 
cocks, 36 cockerels, 10 pullets. Must be disposed of 
by November 1st. For prices, etc., write 
Oak Httj, Estate - Uniontown, Pa. 
FOR SALE 
Single Comb White Leghorn Cockerels 
Barron Strain. Farm raised. April hatched. 
Write for prices. 
ALDEN NODINE, Ravena, New York 
Tom Barron's White Leghorn Cockerels *siS a 
Individually pedigreed from dams with records 200-278 
eirgs. Flock hatched from dams with records 160-198 
eggs. Circular. WILLOW BROOK POULTRY FARM, Odessa, N. Y, 
100 S.C. White Leghorn Chickens L 5 H “°@ ^; for 
50. 
W, J. IIAHN, Carrie Painl Finn, Glen Cove, L I,, X. Y^ 
Trap Nest 
Records 
\)UE have had printed 
' ’ on cardboard 1144x7 
neat and complete trap- 
n e s t record. Printed 
both sides—25 each side. 
Will send 12 for 10c. 
W F.W., care Rural New-Yorker 
333 West 30th Street, New York 
