MAY-WAY CUSTOMERS SPEAK 
HERE ARE REPORTS FROM FOLKS WHO PURCHASED MAY-WAY CHICKS — AND LIKED WHAT THEY 
GOT! OUR FILES ARE FILLED WITH LETTERS LIKE THESE. THEY CAN TELL YOU, BETTER THAN WE, WHY 
THOUSANDS OF MIDWESTERN FLOCK-OWNERS DEPEND, YEAR AFTER YEAR, ON MAY-WAY CHICKS 
FOR PROFITABLE POULTRY OPERATIONS. 
/ eee 2 ; meses lows } 
‘ | “I have ordered May-Way White Rocks 8 years } 
= and like them better all the time. They are good 
‘layers and sell good when you have to cu 
some. The Produce Man and culler always brag} 
on my chicks and say, ‘Where did you get 
ae, them?’ ” 
Farragut, lowa ci 
“I am ordering these May-Way Leg-Hamp 
Chicks because the livability rates so high com- 
pared with other hatcheries. They mature more 
rapidly to firm, solid fries and early layers. 
They are almost non-broody. The extra-large, 
good-shelled eggs are preferred at produce sta- 
tions, and the hens weigh good when I sell them 
in the Fall.” a 
: 
ig 
Mrs. D. H. Hobbs 
sy eS 
* 
ye Swanton, Nebraska 
In the Past years I bought chickens from 
eleven different hatcheries. I found that in 
White Leghorns yours were the largest, heaviest / 
layers, and healthiest of them all. That is why 
I came back and ordered 1400 Best Grade again 
Mrs. Roy Chrisman 
“I have bought your baby chicks for the past 
few years, and have purchased 200 New Hamp- 
shires and Austra-Whites again this year. Have 
such good luck raising them, They are so big 
and sturdy and develop into the best and nicest 
bunch of laying hens.” 
Mrs. Matilda Rolf 
1 this year.” 
Mrs. Lad Placek 
eSegrmmud 
¢ Fontanelle, Iowa 
| “September, 1951, I housed 250 May-Way Best 
Grade Leghorn pullets. Death loss: 3 pullets. 
Production averaged 70%, and I do not have | 
modern equipment, either. May-Way chicks 
have always made me money, because of their 
high livability and high laying ability.” 
Mrs, Pearl V. Jones 
Westboro, Missouri 
“We bought May-Way New Hampshire Reds 
again because out of the 150 we bought last} 
May we only lost 5. We put 60 pullets into the 
laying house and got our first eggs in October. 
From November through March our daily egg 
= average is 42 plus and such large eggs! Hen 
‘weight average is 9 pounds, The chicks we got 
from you this year will be 4 weeks old Monday. 
We got 163 and have not lost a one!” 
: Mrs. Charles Parmenter 
re Council Bluffs, Iowa 
\“I am ordering May-Way Austra-Whites be 
cause your straight run chicks were 65% pullets | 
‘and laid at 44% months. They laid well all Fall! 
and 80 to 85% all Winter and Spring. A chicken 
| doctor culled them for us the next Winter. He 
culled out twelve from 250 hens.” 
| Mrs. Jack Oltmans 
& & 
Graham, Missouri 
“I raise May-Way Production Red chicks be- 
cause they don’t have to be coaxed to live and 
grow. After they are grown I have a plump- 
breasted bird that will really keep the egg cases 
filled. They do not moult easily and are not 
broody and require just ordinary care.” a 
uses Lemar 
PR RTE 
Red Oak, Iowa fect 
“I am ordering May-Way Austra White chicks 
again this year because my records are ‘proof 
of the pudding.’ I have raised chickens only 
two years and both years I bought your Austra- 
‘White Pullets. They are better each year. Of : 
the 300 pullets bought April 22nd, 268 were!” 
housed the last of October. They started laying |, 
50 eggs and have increased until today I 
_ gathered 209 eggs. This makes 80% production, 
since I’ve lost only 8 hens.” : 
Mrs, Robert V._ Gillespie 
fs ees 
Sais Pers Wai SSBC 
Brayton, Iowa 
'“T have tried May-Way Brown Leghorns fo 
the last three years and have had wonderful 
results with them. I do know they take less . 
feed and less space in the laying house after — 
‘they are matured, than the larger breeds of _ 
1 chickens, and I also think they lay more eggs.” J 
: George Cerka 
3h 
Manning, Iowa 
beat that narrow margin between 
#sts and low egg prices? By buying | = 
_ fiigh-producing, low-cost Ma- 
Pipe will make use of eve e ‘e * As A 
FS them. J also think Austr. BUreau of Agricultural Economics predicts poultry will show biggest 
Fore eggs without sacrificing 
j 
yi Aes gain in net income in 1953. A poll of agriculture economists re- 
ii cently brought estimates of up to 25% higher egg prices. Experts 
are unanimous in their predictions of higher and stronger egg 
prices for 1953! A May-Way laying flock can raise your income 
this year! 
