
BARRED ROCKS 
Years of careful selective breeding produce 
chicks that assure both meat and eggs. Our 
Barred Rocks have been a favorite for a 
long, long time. Producing large brown eggs 
and big heavy frames, this breed has a 
definite place on the farm today. May we 
request your order early so that you will be 

ee ds 












oy sure to get your chicks at the time you want 
Barred Rocks them? 
CHICK PRICES eh Mammoth White Pekin Ducklings 
er 100 
White Rocks Eee wieee .))-. e $16.00 Unless you have tried Ducklings, it is hard to believe that 
Barred Rocks ee 16.00 this breed of ducks can be raised to such great weights in so 
CuWhite Lech a eats é short a time. Seven pounds in nine weeks is easily attained. 
i : Nes ne mee R d Ge a Fine $30.00 per 100; 35c each in Iess than 100 lots. 
uper Cw ampsnire Keds . . . 
Red-Rock Crosses > Suter 17.00 
Per 100 
White Leghorn Pullets eee rca $33.00 
Super New Hampshire Pullets. . . 24.00 
RED-ROCK CROSSES 
For quick broiler profits get chicks that develop into prime 
meat In minimum feeding time. Order our Red-Rock cross— 
produced by mating Barred Rocks to New Hampshire Red 
hens. You get the benefit of hybrid vigor from two vigorous 
parent strains, which results in solid heavy-meated birds with 
heavy thighs and full breasts. Their fast growth and meat 
characteristics bring you greater broiler profits. 
Stazdry Poultry Litter . . $2.30 Bale 













“LOW FEED 
CONSUMPTION” 
150 New Hampshires average 
4.3 lbs. at 12 weeks of age 
In the New York State Chicken of Tomorrow Contest, Mr. 
Leonard C. Schleicher won first prize and the A. and P. Trophy 
in the Senior Division. 
“At 12 weeks of age,”’ writes Mr. Schleicher, “they averaged 4.3 
Ibs. per bird and had eaten 13.9 Ibs. of feed per bird. This was at 
the rate of 3.23 Ibs. of feed for each pound of growth . . . and 
shows that our birds are economical to produce. 
“At 12 weeks,” continues Mr. Schleicher, “we selected 15 of the 
best cockerels and shipped them to the contest headquarters at 
Troy, where the official weight was 
70 Ibs. for the 15 birds, or 4.67 Ibs. 
each. 
“Our birds are economical to pro- 
duce on the Beacon Broiler program.” 
We think that these results demon- 
strate very well what a good breeding 
program, plus good feed and manage- 
standing beside the C f 
trophy he won in ment, can produce in the way of the 
H chicken Of Tomer: —FEED BEACON— modern chicken. 
LANCASTER, PENNA. Prices Subject To Change 23 
@ Leonard Schleicher 


