I 200 E^s a Year $ Per Hen: t How to Get Them. »i> EDGAR. WARREfi. Price, 50 Cents. Syracuse. N. Y. Clarence C. De Puy, Publisher. 1905. m * * i S * * Poultry Supplies We (Manufacture the Famous Empire State Incubators and Brooders and the $5 Russ Prize-Winning Brooder. Sole U^ew York and Export Jlgent for Prairie State Incubators and Brooders. Star Incubators and Brooders. : : : tAU (Makes of & Green Bone and Vegetable Cutters, Grinding Mills, Exhibition and Shipping Coops, White Washing Machines, Beef Scraps, Oyster Shells, Charcoal, Egg Foods, Condition Powders, Dog Cakes and Medicines. And everything necessary for breeding and rearing all kinds of Pooltry, Pigeons and Pet Stock . Our immense 1905 Catalogue of Poultry Supplies contains over 208 pages and is the largest and most complete one published . It's free for the asking. Send for one. Excelsior Wire and Poultry Supply Co. W. V. RUSS, Prop., Dept. P. P. 26-28 Vesey St., NEW -YORK CITY. FIFTH EDITION 200 Eggs a Year Per Hen: How to Get Them. A Practical Treatise on Egg Making and Its Conditions and Profits in Poultry. By EDGAR WARREN. Price, 50 Cents. Syracuse, N. Y. CLARENCE C. De PUY, Publisher. 1905. LIBRARY of CONGRESS fwo Copies Kec.il veil APR 3 1905 oovngni two A*/<>-- sible to confine it to that compartment — germs traveling in the air, or being conveyed from one pen to another in excrement which may stick to the feet. With the community plan go long, narrow- yards or parks, which can be fenced only at considerable cost. The scratching shed has now become an integral part of many of the long houses. The scratching shed, as its name implies, is a place tor exercise under the same roof with the laving room, but more open to the weather. The scratching shed has many enthu- siastic advocates Avho claim that it is indispensible to the health and comfort of the fowls in the winter, and will more than pay for it- self in an increased egg output. The claims for the scratching shed house seem so valid that if I were building a house more than sixty feet in length, I should certainly add scratching shed<. It is impossible in an article like this to give a plan for a house that will suit every purse and every place. 1 can only submit a cut of what I consider the best community house 1 have yet seen, and give a brief description of it. The house is on the Gardner Dunning Poultry Farm, of Auburn, N\ Y. The house shown in the foreground of the view is 180 feet long by 12 wide, and is divided into 10 sections, each 18 feet. Each sec- tion is in turn divided into a scratching shed of nine feet, and a laying and roosting room of the same length. The house is made of the best material, double boarded with paper between and ceiled overhead at the height of six feet. In each pen is a large window, a small ventilating window into the hallway and a ventilating hole- - E P ° T 2 cut through the ceiling which draw- off the foul air but forms no draught. The scratching sheds are open m front, with a canvas which can be let down to keep the snow out. The yards are 150 feet long, with a row of fruit trees ill each, and are plowed and sowed each year. At present there are three of these long houses on the plant and more will he added as they are needed. THE MONTANA EXPERIMENT STATION HOUSE. An important and in many ways desirable variation from tiie ordinary scratching shed house is the main poultry building in use at the Agricultural Experiment Station at Bozeman, Montana. '"The building is 72 feet long and 14 feet wide with a four-foot passage in the rear. It is divided into pens 12 feet long and 10 feet wide, and is set upon a foundation of stone 18 inches wide and two feet high. The slope of the roof is for the main portion to the south, the ridge coming just above the passage way four feet from the rear wall. This slope of roof is of great advantage since the sun rapidly melts the snow on the southern incline, making it warmer and drier, while on the other side the slope is so steep that the snow does not lodge there. ''The next most important feature is the double floor. The exit from the pens is through the floor into the space underneath the building. This basement has a ground floor, and it is two feet from the ground to the sills. In summer this makes a line, cool and shady place when doors shown in cut are down and portholes open, while in winter with the doors raised the low sun enables the sun- light to extend more than half of the distance from front to rear, making an ideal place for dusting and scratching. This feature adds greatly to the usefulness of the building, since it so materially increases the floor space without affecting the area of the roof." THE COLONY-COMMUNITY PLAN. The third method of keeping hens in large numbers is, so far as I know, original with me, and may be called the colony-com- munity plan. The plan in brief is this: To keep the hens in small detached houses built in streets and situated close to one another, with yards running to the rear instead of the front. It has always seemed to me a great mistake to run the yards to the front of a hen house instead of to the rear. There are in- numerable occasion- when the poultryman wishes to visit a pen in 13 a" ^ 3 ~ C5 ~. g c 14 the middle of a long house, and in order to do so he must open and shut half a dozen doors to pass along an alley way for fifty or one hundred feet. When he wishes to remove the litter or shovel sand into the middle pens it is necessary to open and shut a number of gates before he can do so. But with the yards in the rear the poultryman can drive along the front of his house and reach the middle pen as easily as he can at the ends. Colony-community houses arranged in streets, with yards running to the rear. The houses that 1 use in the colony-community plan ait.' all alike, and are very simple in construction. Each house is 12 feet long, seven feet wide, seven feet high in front and five feet high in the rear; and is designed to accommodate 50 brooder chicks, 20 head of laying stock, or a breeding pen of one male and 12 females. The house rests on cedar posts or old railroad ties put in the ground below the frost line and sawed off eight inches above the surface. There are six of these posts, three on each side, and where old railroad ties are used the whole cost of the foundation is 15 cents. On these ties are laid two main sills and four cross sills, each 2x4 spruce. The plates are 2x4 stuff, but the other timbers in the frame — posts and rafters — are 2x3. 15 After the building is framed the floor is laid. This is double, -and between the upper and lower floor Neponset black sheathing is used. The covering to the frame is then put on, and over the boards Neponset black sheathing is tacked. This is to be covered with Neponset red paper. All the boards in the frame are hemlock. The roof is a very important part of a hen house. When the rafters are put on they are sawed oft' flush with the plate; and when the sides are boarded thie boards are brought up so that they cover the ends of the rafters and also the edge of the roofing boards, mak- ing an absolutely tighi joint. Neponset black sheathing is then laid Colony-community bouse designed to accommodate f>0 brooder chicks, 20 head of laying stock, or oue male and 12 females. over the roof boards, and a double course of shingles laid along the lcwer edge of the roof. The object of this course of shingles is to throw the water from the roof away from the house. The roof is then covered with Paroid, carefully put on and allowed to project a few inches at the ends. This flap will eventually be turned in and held in place by the finish. The house is supposed to face south. There are two windows, one on the south side and one on the east end. There is a door in front, and a panel in the rear which can be raised or lowered at will 16 to let the hens oui into the yard. After the house is finished all the outside woodwork receive? a coat of dark green paint, which forms an effective contrast with the brick-red of the Neponset paper. Indeed, all who see the house remark how neat and pretty it is. [NTEKIOK CONTRUCTION. The interior of the house is of the very simplest. I have learned from hard experience to have as little furniture in a hen house as possible, and that many of the things advertised as helps for poultrymen are really hindrances. The house, as I have -aid. faces the south. The roosts, instead of being in the rear, as is commonly the case, are in the west end, away from all possibility of draughts. The roost platform is two feet and a half above the floor, and is constructed of dry matched pine boards, which I get from old dry goods boxes. The platform, as soon as built, is cov- ered with a coat of hot tar. There are two roosts, or perches, parallel and on the same level. T forgot to say that the roost plat- form is three feet wide, which enables me to place my perches one foot apart, and one foot from the back wall and one foot from the edge of the platform. The perches are of spruce, 2x3, with the upper end slightly rounded, and set in sockets cut out of hoards. They are removable. The perches are also covered with hot tar, as are the sockets in which they are set. Red mites let my liouses severely alone. The materials used in the house are as follows: Hemlock boards, 500 feet; matched pine for doors, trimmings, etc., 60 feet: frame (board measure), 100 feet; windows, Neponset black sheath- ing, 250 feet; Neponset red rope. 250 feet; Paroid, 1<>(> feet; hard- ware, etc. The cost of such a house, exclusive of labor, in New Hampshire to-day would he not far from $20. Two men, working together, can complete the house in two days. Such a house always finds a ready sale, and if the owner wishes to move out of town or go out of the hen business at any time he can sell the house for about half what it cost him. In case a somewhat larger house is wanted, the dimensions may be enlarged as follows: Length, 14 feet: width. 8 feet; height in front, 7| feet; height in rear,5^ feet. This will preserve the pro- portions and give nearly one-half more floor space. 17 HOUSE MADE FROM PIANO BOXES. Possibly there are some who desire even a cheaper house than the ones I have described. It may be they expect to remain but a short time where they are, or wish a house for young stock, and do not care to invest even $20 in a building. To such I would say that a good temporary house can be made from two piano boxes at a cost of about $3. The simplest way to make such a house is as fol- lows: On a level place lay down two joists eight feet long. Take Three Dollar Poultry Houses. Good summer buildings, anil in a warm climate suitable for winter. the boxes and carefully remove the boards on the tallest side. Spike the boxes to the joists, so that the open ends will face each other. With the boards you have taken out close up the gap be- tween the boxes on the hack and roof. Put a door in front, a pane of glass on either side of the door, or two panes in the door itself, complete laying the floor, put in a roost, cover the building with good roofing paper, and you have a house that will accommodate a dozen hens at a trifling cost. CHAPTER III. Sanitation a* a factor in C<^<| Production. Sanitation is one of the most important factors in egg produc- tion. As blossom and fruit are the culmination of the tree's activ- ities, so the egg is the culmination of the activities of the hen. The hen cannot lay heavily unless she is in perfect physical condi- tion. One of the ways in which disease iirsl reveals itself is in the dropping off of the egg product. The poultryman who desire- the largest return from his investment must make a careful >\ui\\ of sanitation. A SANITARY HOUSE. The style of house a man builds will depend something upon his means and personal preferences. There are houses costing thousands of dollars, and there are houses built for less than a dollar a running foot. I have known hens to do well in houses made of piano boxes, costing, when completed, three dollars apiece. But whether the house is cheap or dear, elaborate or simple, it should have three characteristics: 1. It must he dry. Dampness is fatal to fowls. Roup, rheu- matism and kindred evils go with a damp house. The house should always he built in ample season so that it may thoroughly be dried out before winter, and unless the around on which it stands is as dry as powder it should have a board floor. 2. The house should be warm. Nature lias provided the hen with an ample covering of feathers, and she will not freeze even if the temperature falls far below zero. But under such conditions she will lay but few eggs. How can she? All her food goes toward making caloric, and there is no surplus for anything else. In a properly constructed house there is no need for any artificial heat. A house should be so built that in the coldest weather water will not freeze solid in it. If it does a curtain should be provided to drop down behind the hens and shul them in when they are on the roosts. 3. The house should be sunny. Hens love the sun. See them stand in the path of sunlight on the morning of a clear, bright win- ter day. The house should face the south or southeast, whenever possible. There should no1 be too many windows, for windows Let the heat out as they lei it in, and the difference in temperature between noon and night is too great. KEEP THE HOUSE CLEAN. Cleanliness is the most important element in sanitation. Dis- ease germs find in filth a congenial soil. The hen house cannot be kept too clean! The room in which liens are con lined plays many parts — it is their sleeping room, dining room, workshop, their bath room and water closet. Suppose a large family to be shut up in one room and obliged to use it for eveiy purpose. Do you not see how careful they would have to be to escape disease? It is a won- der to me how hens manage to live through the winter in the ma- jority of houses, to say nothing of laying eggs. The hen house should have its daily, weekly, monthly and yearly cleaning. The window's should be opened in the middle of the day for two or three hours on every day in winter when the sun is shining. The droppings under the roosts should be removed every morning! When poultrymen realize that poultry manure is a virulent poison and should not be allowed to pollute the houses or the yards where the hens are kept, they will make a great step toward success. It takes but a few minutes to a house to remove the droppings, and the gain in looks and in wholesomeness is worth the cost. After the droppings are removed the dropping board should be sprinkled lightly with earth, coal ashes or land plaster. Once a week, summer or winter, the drinking vessels should be scalded out, and once a week in winter the litter should be shaken up, and if you have a board floor, the dust and dirt that settles to the bottom should be removed. If the floor is of earth the surface droppings should lie taken out and the earth raked e, p. Once a month the cleaning should be more thorough. The litter should be renewed, and the floor swept. The roosts should be kerosened and in summer the walls around the roosts sprayed with kerosene or with a kerosene emulsion. Nest boxes should be emptied, painted with a good lice killer, and when dried out filled about one-third full of dry planer shavings. The dust box should receive attention. The annual cleaning is still more radical. On some sunny day in autumn — the earler the better — shut the hens out in their yards and begin work upon their quarters. Everything movable in the house should be taken outside. Sweep the dust and cobwebs off 20 the walls, windows and ceiling. Sweep the floor, if yon have one. The walls should then receive a generous coat of hot whitewash, put on with a spray pump to save time. A good receipt for whitewash is as follows: Take a sufficient quantity of lime, slack it slowly and wet enough to make into a thick putty. Let it stand in this shape a few hours or a few days, and then reduce it with water to the thickness desired. Add one pint of crude carbolic acid to every 12-quart pailful, and you will have a combination that will be death to lice. Sprinkle the floor with napcreol or some other disinfect- ant, kerosene the roosts, paint the nest boxes with some good lice killer, cover the dropping board with a coat of hot tar — in short, give the house a thorough cleaning. LICE AND RED MITES. Relentless and persistent war must be waged against lice and red mites. The poultryman who keeps his house in the sanitary condi- tion I have described is apt to think that the battle is won. that there is nothing more to do. Such is not the case. The foe is in hiding; it is not destroyed. There comes a falling off in egg pro- duction, and the poultryman wonders what is the cause. "Lice," says a too candid friend. The poultryman waxes indignant. "I'll give you a dollar apiece for every louse you find on my hens!"' he exclaims. The friend takes a hen off the nest, and holds her up to- ward the light, "full apart the fluff around the vent." he com- mands. The poultryman does so. and. lo! a covey of lice may be seen cutting to cover in the dense jungle of soft feathers. Where a big egg record is desired the hens must not be left to rid themselves of lice by their own efforts, but must lie dusted from time to time. The poultryman can make his own insect powder cheaper than be can buy it. but where only a few hens are kepi it will not pay him to do so. Lambert's "Death to Lice"' and Cyphers Lice Powder are standard preparations. If the poultryman wishes to make his own powder here are two formulas that may be de- pended upon: 1. Take one pint of slacked lime and stir into it one ounce liquid carbolic acid. Add to this mixture three pounds finely ground tobacco and mix thoroughly. 'Ibis powder dusted wherever lice are will kill them. 2. Take five pounds strong tobacco dust, one pound air-slacked lime, one-half pound napthalenc — mix well together. This is sure death to hen lice, plant lice, lice on cattle, sheep ticks, bed bug-, ants, moths, etc. 21 Lice paint is a liquid preparation, and is used for painting roosts, nests, etc. The fumes penetrate the feathers of the bird and kill the lice. Lee's Lice Killer and Cyphers Surekil Lice Paint are highly recom- mended. A good lice paint is made by dissolving one pound napthalene flakes in one gallon kerosene oil. Bed mites make their home on the underside of the roosts and in cracks and crevices adjacent. They are quiet by day, but by night come forth to suck the life blood of their victims. The kero- sene treatment, which I have already described, is sure death to red mites, and it is folly not to exterminate them. TO KID A HOUSE OF VEKMIK Sometimes through carelessness or neglect a house becomes in- fested with vermin, and then radical measures are necessary. In the first place the house should be thoroughly fumigated. Close every door and window, and see that there are no cracks or apert- ures to admit air. Burn a pound of sulphur for every 100 square feet of floor space in the house, thus: a house 10x10 will require one pound of sulphur; one 20x10 two pounds; one 30x10 three pounds, and so on. The sulphur must be burned in iron vessels, which must be set on gravel or sand, so that there can be no danger from fire. Into each vessel put a handful of carpenter's shavings, saturated with kerosene, and upon these sprinkle the sulphur. Place the vessels in position, apply a match to the shavings, and hastily leave the house, closing the door behind you. Do not open the bouse again for five hours, when every door and window should be thrown wide open. In case you feel any anxiety about fire, you can look in through a window once in a while to see that every- thing is going well. After the fumes of sulphur have been driven out, with a hand sprayer, go through the house, sending a spray of kerosene every- where. These sprayers can be bought for half a dollar each, will last for years, and are simply invaluable. All the time you have been at work the hens have been in the yard outside, without food, and are now anxious to return to their home. Let them in, one by one, and as each enters catch her and dust her well with some good insecticide. GIVE THE HENS PLENTY OE ROOM. There is a snare spread for beginners in the poultry business which catches nearly all; it is to crowd the birds. The prospec- 22 five poultry man has a small flock and they have laid well. Me be- gins to reason like this: '■'! have kepi L2 hens in this pen the past year and the] have netted me two dollars apiece. All 1 have to do t<> increase my income is to increase the number of my birds. If 12 hens have paid $24, 50 liens will pay me $100." This seems logical, and the prospective poultryman goes to work and put- in 50 birds, only to find at the end of the year that the 50 birds have not paid him so well as the 12 did. They have laid no more eggs, and sickness has been rife among them. .More men lose money and retire from the poultry business in disgust from losses broughl about by putting too many birds into one pen than from any other cause. The farmer would not think of putting two cows in one stall. He would not plant his potatoes in rows one foot apait. He would not shut up his family in one room. Why should he not display the same good sense in dealing with his fowls/ Experi- ence has shown that 10 square feet of flour space is about the amount needed by each hen if she is to do her best. Where the house is kept perfectly clean, and where the hens have a chance to get out doors every pleasant day, they can gel along with a some what smaller space. But for the best ' results in egg producing there must be plenty of room. The year I made the phenomenal record with my White Wyandottes — 214 eggs apiece from October to October — 1 knocked out the partitions between two pens and gave the floek double room. Ok ST BATH. Provide your hens with a dust bath. They will spend many happy hours wallowing in the warm earth and will keep themselves reasonably free from lice. But do not trust to the dust bath en- tirely, for in the dead of winter the bath is often so cold that the biddies will not use it. and then lice will get in their work. Soil out of the garden, sifted through a common coal sieve, makes the best materia] for a dust bath that I know anything about. \e\i to this I rank coal ashes. The bath tub may be a sugar barrel, sawed off about a foot from the bottom and set in a sunny place, or one of those shallow square boxes that cereal foods come in, which may generally be obtained of the grocer for the asking. EXEBCLSE. Hens need a reasonable amount of exercise. They do not need to be kept on the jump from morning until night, but they do need 23 enough exercise to keep them in good trim. Where liens have free range they will attend to the matter of exercise themselves— although a hen having free range knows enough not to work when it is very hot or very cold. But when in confinement exercise mast be provided for them. The floor of the hen house, or scratching shed, should he kept carpeted with six inches of litter in winter, and the fowls should he made to work for all the grain they eat. This litter, as I have already said, should be frequently shaken up and occasionally renewed. Straw, fresh hay and dead leaves make the best litter. Dry planer shavings are good if they are not al- lowed to become too fine. THE POULTRY YAED. In summer the hens should be out in their yards. The yard does not need to be very large. Indeed, unless the yard is large enough to grow all the green stuff that is needed for forage, a small yard is better than a large one, for it is more likely to be kept clean. Much money is spent each year for wire netting and foundation boards for fences that could be laid out to much better, advantage in some other way. There should be shade of some kind in the yard. If the yard is small it should he raked and swept every week and the surface droppings removed. It should be spaded up from time to time. In the spring the surface soil to the depth of three or four inches should be removed and spread on the garden and replaced with fresh earth. If this is done there is much less danger of sickness with a small yard than with a big one that is never cleaned. GEIT, CHABCOAL AND OYSTER SHELLS. Nature has not provided fowls with teeth, and consequently they cannot masticate their food as can the higher animals. The food passes from the crop into the gizzard, where it is prepared for the intestines by trituration; that is, as the food passes through the gizzard it is triturated, or ground up, by the little flinty particles which line that member. Unless the fowl is well supplied with grit the food passes into the intestines improperly prepared, and the result is indigestion. It is a great mistake not to keep the fowls well supplied with grit. Charcoal is an alterative tonic, and should be before the hens all the time. Oyster shells are neces- sary to supply the lime needed for the egg shells, and nothing can take their place. 24 DRINKING WATER. Pure drinking water is as necessary to the health and comfort of fowls as it is to the health and comfort of human beings, and should be supplied in abundance. The water dishes should be scalded out from time to time, and if a few drops of carbolic acid are added to the water with which they are scalded so much the better. Have your water dish as simple as possible. There is nothing better than a two-quart measure, made of galvanized iron, set on a little shelf by the door of the hen house and six inches from the floor. SANITATION IN SUMMER. it has been my observation that hens that are kept shut up in houses and \;\r^\> suffer more from lack of sanitation in summer than in winter. There are a hundred directions printed for mak- ing the house warm to one for making it cool. And yet anyone who has watched a hen on a hot day in mid-summer, with mouth wide open and wings outspread, must realize that the poor creature is far from comfortable. Houses built on the colony community plan, such as I have already described, are ideal houses for summer as well as for winter, as there is a window in the front and on the end. As soon as warm weather comes I take out both windows, letting the air circulate freely through the house. Poultry wire tacked on the outside of the window frame keeps the biddies in and the "varmints" out. CHAPTER IV. Feeding for Two Hundred Egg* A Year. We now have our liens in a dry, warm, sunny and sanitary house, have supplied them with facilities for keeping cleau, and, of course, want them to lay. What shall we feed and how much? This is an important question, for unless a hen is supplied with ma- terial for egg production she cannot lay. She can no more produce ■eggs without the proper food than a factory can turn out the finished product without raw materials. What shall we feed ami how much shall we feed, therefore? Let us again follow Lord Bacon's advice and interrogate Na- ture. Suppose we take a hen as she comes up to the house at the close of a long day in summer from foraging in the fields, kill her, take out her crop and analyze its contents. If we do so it is obvious that we shall obtain at least a part of the information we are after, for a hen lays in summer or not at all. What do we find as the result of our analysis? The crop we are dissecting has about as many articles in it as the average small boy's pocket, and they are equally miscellaneous. We find grains of corn that the hen has picked up about the barn, pieces of bread and table waste that she has found under the sink spout, clover leaves and tips of grass blades, bugs, worms and a mass of matter that we cannot resolve into the original elements. The first thing that impresses us as the result of our analysis is that the hen seeks variety. This mass of miscellaneous matter that we found in the hen's crop *can be arranged in three divisions: 1. Grain. 2. Green food and vegetables. 3. Animal food — in the form of bugs, worms and so forth. The conclusion is irresistible, that these three elements must be combined if we would have a perfect ration. How shall we combine them? The answer is not so difficult as one would at first suppose. There are many ways. The hen makes a new combination every day. Perhaps the ideal way is to have no stereotyped method, but to study variety. If we com- bine grain, green food and meat in the daily ration, the hen can haidly fail to respond with a goodly output of eggs. 26 FEEDING KOR EGGS: MOW MUCH. The problem, as every poultryman knows, is no1 whal to feed, luii how much. II you do no1 believe this write in the editor of your favorite poultry paper and ask him how much food you shall give a llnck of 15 hens, and sec what he will say. It takes a great deal of skill to steer between overfeeding on the one hand and underfeeding on the other. 1 believe, however, that there is a scientific principle underlying the matter, and think that alter a great deal of study and experimentation 1 have discovered the principle. In order to determine how much we should teed we must again interrogate Nature. Before we began to disseei the crop of the hen we had killed, suppose we had put it in the scales to ascertain its weight. If the lien from which the crop was taken was of an American breed, if she had been running in the fields all day and just before she had been killed had been given all the corn that she would eat, her crop with its contents would weigh not far from six ounces. Allowing that two ounces of food have passed into the intestines, it will be seen that when a hen is on the range, supplied with abundance of food, she will consume about eight ounces of food in the course of 24 hours. It would seem, therefore, that this is about the amount a hen need- to supply all the demands of her system and leave a margin for egg production. But before we settle down to this conclusion there are some things to be taken into consideration. On the range the hen has had plenty of exercise, and needs more food to supply the tissue lost than when in confinement. On the range food is more bulky and less nutritious than the food the hen receives in her pen. II con- tains a larger proportion of grass and vegetables. It is probable that in the pen. where the hen does not exercise so freely as she does on the range and where her food is more concentrated, she does not need so much food by one-fourth as -he does when at lib- ertv. Six ounces of food a day ought, therefore, to' be ample to supply all the needs of a hen in confinemeni. Six ounces of food a day for a hen weighing six pounds seems at first sight an enormous quantity. In the same ratio a man weighing 160 pounds would consume 10 pounds of food every 24 hours. But before we dismiss the matter as absurd let us consider a moment. The hen's food is not so concentrated as the man's. It contains far less nutriment in proportion to bulk. A consider- able proportion of it will be voided in the form of excrement. Then 27 the hen has a task to perform such as is imposed upon few other creatures. Slie is expected to Lay an egg weighing no! less than two ounces; and an egg, as everyone knows, is one of the richest of food products. Deduci from the six ounces of food two ounces for waste and two ounces for egg production, and it will be seen that only two ounces are left to repair the tissues and maintain the temperature of the body. The laying hen needs a generous diet, and those doctrinaires who advocate keeping her in a state of semi-starvation have no support in reason for their theory. FEEDING FOE EGGS: WINTEB METHOD. Having given my readers the principles thai apply to feeding, I purpose now to tell thiciu how 1 put these principles into prac- tice. I desire to state here that 1 have no patent methods. I aim to apply common sense to the problem of egg production, as L do to other things; but I do not claim to have a monopoly of wisdom. There are doubtless other methods as good as mine. As I said in a preceding section, there are many possible combinations that will produce good results. 1 give you mine, and leave you to adopt it or not as 3'ou think best. From October to May I feed as follows: A mash the first thing in the morning. The mash is made as 1 am about to de- scribe. Into an iron kettle holding 12 quarts I put two quarts (dry measure) cut clover, two quarts mixed feed or wheal bran, two quarts corn meal, one quart green ground bone or beet scraps, and one quart table scraps. The ingredients are thoroughly mixed to- gether. I then take the kettle into the house and set it on the range, where the metal can become warm. I next stir in a heap- ing teaspoonful of salt, and in the coldest weather sprinkle in a little black pepper. Boiling water is 'then added to the mash in just sufficient quantity to moisten every particle and yet not have it sticky and sloppy. 1 consider the mash just right to feed when I can take some up in my hand and have it feel pleasantly warm (not hot), and dry enough so that it will not ad- here to the palm or fingers. Some advocate dry feeding. 1 have no doubt the food is just as nourishing without the water, and after they become accustomed to it (or starved into it) the bens will eat it readily enough; but before the food can be digested it must be moistened, and I think it better and safer to moisten it for the birds myself than to allow them to do so. I do not be- lieve the bird can moisten a lare-e handful of drv mixture after it 28 enters the crop so evenly as I can before it goes there. Then if the mash is about the temperature of the bird's body when it is fed (or, on cold mornings, a little higher) she will not have to use up her heat in raising it to that temperature. FEED ALE THE HENS WILL EAT UP CLEAN. I feed all the mash the hens will eat up clean in a reasonable time — say from 15 minutes to half an hour. Then I go through the pens and empty what is left (if anything) hack into the kettle to he fed the next da} r . At 11 o'clock I make a round of the pens to collect the eggs and look after the birds. On this trip I take with me green food of some sort — mangel wurzels, cabbages, apples or onions — and leave in each pen the amount thai experience has shown me the birds will eat up clean. About % o'clock in the afternoon I make the round of the pens again. I have told you that in each pen I keep a male and 12 females, and on this trip in the early afternoon I throw down in the deep litter one quart (dry measure) of grain of some kind. The three grains I feed arc wheat, cracked corn and oats. I study to give variety. On a mild afternoon I feed all oats or all wheat, on a moderately cold after- noon, about half cracked corn and about half wheat or oats, and on a very cold afternoon, cracked corn alone. When I get home from making pastoral calls it is generally dusk and the hens have gone to roost. Before supper I go through each pen to see that the birds are all right for the night. I empty the water dishes, collect any eggs that may be in the nests, pause a moment in each house to see that the birds are breathing right (no colds nor bronchitis) and occasionally feel of the crops to see. if I am feeding enough. If the crop is comfortably full — neither distended on the one hand nor nearly empty on the other — I conclude that the grain ration is about right so far as quantity is concerned. STUDY VARIETY. 1 have given the ingredients of my standard morning mash, but I vary these ingredients from time to time. I don't want the same thing for breakfast every morning, and I don't believe my birds do. About twice a week I substitute gluten meal or linseed meal for green ground bone or meat scraps; and once in a while 1 give a breakfast of scalded oats — the oats scalded the night before and allowed to stand on the back of the stove where they will be warm and nice in the morning. Occasionally I give a breakfast 29 made up of three parts by bulk of Biles' Fourex* and one pari t»\ bulk of corn meal. When I have plenty of small potatoes I make up a dish composed of boiled mashed potatoes, green ground bone and mixed feed or bran, which the fowls eat with avidity. L put in about four quarts potatoes, two quarts green ground bone and two quarts mixed feed or bran — season and serve hjot. The table scraps, which I feed every morning, add variety to my standard ration. ♦Biles' Fourex (XXXX) is a by-product from distillers' grains. Very rich in fat and portein. A valuable new food, when mixed with one-third its bulb of corn meal FEEDING FOE EGGS— SUMMER METHOD. My method of feeding in summer is substantially the same as it is in winter, except that corn is struck entirely off my list and wheat and oats made to take its place. In summer, too, I give my hens grass and weeds from the garden for green food, instead of mangels, cabbages, apples and onions. We are fortunate here in Hampton in having close at hand an inexhaustible supply of food not usually found. Every northeast storm washes up on the beach tons and tons of seaweed, which may be had for the hauling. A load of seaweed dumped into a yard in summer will breed mil- lions of small white worms, which the fowls eat greedily. These worms, or maggots, are said to be better for the hens than wheat, and certainly form a very cheap addition to the daily bill of fare. FEEDING FOR EGGS- CAUTION. In what goes before I have given my method of feeding, but this method will need to be adopted to individual cases. No hard and fast rule can be laid down. The poultryman must study his flock, and learn by experience — he must mix brains with bis mash. The large criticism that will be made is that I feed too heavy and do not make my birds exercise enough. Bear in mind, however, that 1 have been talking about laying stock. Birds that are kept over for breeding are fed the same things that 1 feed my laying stock, but are not fed so much and are made to exercise more. In one case I am after eggs and a good many of them: in the other, I am after fertile eggs — that will hatch strong chicks. If you notice that your birds are becoming fat and lazy, drop an oc- casional soft-shelled egg } and that thir combs instead of being a healthy red are a dull purple, reduce the ration at once and set the birds to work — otherwise vou will have dead bens on your hands. 30 Aboui the time of feeding the mash; it don't make a cent's worth of difference whether yon feed morning, noon or night, so long as you feed enough and feed the right things. THE GOLDEN KULE FOB FEEDING. Give the hen a sufficient variety and quantity to meet all the needs of her system and leave a margin for egg production. A. warm mash in the morning, all she will cat with good relish in L5 minutes to half an hour. Enough grain during the day so that she will go to roosl with a crop moderately full, neither distended on the one hand nor nearly empty on the other. Green food, either in mash or separately. More heating food in winter and more of it, than in summer. In general, it may he said that one ounce of food a dav for each pound she weighs is aboui right for the average hen. HOW" SOME SUCCESSFUL MEN FEED. Air. B. F. Dunlap, West Salisbury, N. IF— One of the most re- markable poultrymen that I know anything about is Mr. B. F. Dun- lap of West Salisbury, N. IE, who keeps from 450 to 500 head of laying stock (White Wyandottes and Bhode Island Vv><\±) and clears up a profit of $1,000 yearly. Mr. Dunlap is postmaster and pro- prietor ot a country store, and all the time he can devote to his hens is what he can snatch from his business. Mr. Dunlap lives five miles from the nearest railroad, and makes his profits from c-ggs, which he markets in Boston. •'Every day something different/ 5 is the principle he goes on, as expressed in his own words. He has four combinations, which he names from the leading article in each: Boiled potatoes, waste bread, clover hay, whole oats. The four combinations are as Eol- lows enough kettlesful being mixed up to feed the whole flock: 1. Boiled potatoes, soaked over night, 8 quarts; gluten, soaked over night, 3 quarts. In the morning add mixed Iced. 2 quarts; corn and oats, ground and mixed together, 2 quarts. 2. Waste bread, soaked over night, 8 quarts; heel' scraps, 2 quarts; corn and oats, 2 quarts. '■]. Clover hay, soaked over night. In the morning add 2 quarts (lour middlings, 2 quarts boiled beef and hone. 2 quarts coi n and oats. 4. Whole oats, soaked over night, 8 quarts; gluten, soaked over night, I quarts. In the morning add 2 quarts shorts, 1 quart beef and hone. 2 quarts corn and oats. 31 The mash is fed in the morning, and the hens arc given -ill they will eat up clean in ten minutes. Th,e second and last meal comes at noon, and is grain of seme kind. The day Mr. Dunlap feeds boiled potatoes the liens have wheat. The day he feeds waste bread they have wheat or cracked corn. The day he feeds clover hay they have cracked corn. And the day he feeds oats and gluten they have cracked corn or buckwheat. The grain is thrown into the sand and litter in each pen, and the liens have to scratch for it. Mr. Dunlap does not give the hens all the grain they can eat, but as much as they can digest and come to breakfast the next morning with an empty crop and a good ap- petite. Whole turnips are kept in the pens all the time, so that the liens can get a taste of green food when thev want it. Mr. G. M. Gowell of the Maine Experiment Station is doing some excellent work with hens. Mr. Gowell is the originator of the trap nest described in this book, and keeps individual records. He breeds White Wyandottes and Barred Plymouth "Rocks, and long ago found the 200 egg hen. He feeds as follows: Twenty pullets and two cockerels are kept in each lot. Each pen of 22 receives one pint of wheat, in the deep litter •early in the morning. At 9.30 a. m. one-half pint of oats is fed to them in the same Avay. At 1 p. m. one-half pint of cracked com is given in the litter as before. At 3 p. m. in winter and 4 p. m. in the summer they are given all the mash they will eat up clean, in half an hour. The mash is made of the following mixture of meals: — 200 pounds wheat bran, 100 pounds corn meal, 100 pounds wheat mid- dlings. 100 pounds linseed meal, 100 pounds meat meal or fine meat scraps. Bart of the year the linseed meal is omitted, and the amount of .neat meal doubled. The mash contains one-fourth of its bulk of clover leaves and heads, secured from the feeding floor in rhe cattle barn. The clover is thoroughly soaked with hot water. The mash is made quite dry. Cracked bone, oyster shells, •clean grit and water are at all. times before them. Two large mangels are ted to the birds in each pen daily in winter, and green food in plenty in summer. C. Bricault, M.D.Y., of Audover, Mass., is another man who has succeeded in obtaining the 200-egg hen — some of his White Wyan- dottes having considerably exceeded this figure. Dr. Bricault relies 32 more upon inheritance than upon any special hill of fare in getting the "00-egg hen. but his method of feeding, as given in his own words, is excellent. "Morning. — One of the following grains is scattered in the In- tel-: oats, wheat, corn, barley, about one handful to Two hens. We then water the hens, giving warmed water on very cold days; that is. water with the chill taken off. "Noon. — Grain as in the morning, but less, about one handful to three hens. We feed a different grain at every meal. At this meal we give the green food of the day (cabbage one day. beets the next, scalded clover or whatever we have on hand), but they get green food every day. Sometimes we give a feed of green cut bone as a variety in place of grain; but we do not feed cut bone regularly. "Night. — Our mash is fed at night, and we give the hens all they will eat. We make the mash as follows: bran, corn meal, ground oats, equal parts by bulk, well mixed together. These meals are put in the trough with enough boiling water to make the mass 'wet dry,' and covered over with a bag and left to cook in their own heat: when cool it is fed. We feed the mash every second day. We feed it in long troughs, and give all they will eat up clean in half an hour. The days on which the mash is omitted we giye • of the above mentioned grains — one handful to each hen. third contains a mixture of meat and the ground grains used in the mash, half meat and half grain. This last makes a good mixture to serve as lunch between meals. "We also keep a small piece of rock salt in each [ten for the hens to pick at. This can be placed in a slatted box, with the slat- about two inches apart. "We helie\e in regularity in feeding and practice it. "After the hens have gone to roost at nighf we scatter the morn- "A self-feeding trough is placed in every pen, divided into three compartments: in one there is grit, in the other oyster shells, the ing feed in the litter so the hens can go to scratching as soon as they come off the roost in the morning." FEEDING FOR EGGS: A WOMAN'S WAY. "In the morning 1 feed a mash made of about two parts bran to- one part ground oats. For every 50 hens I put in two quarts, good measure, of green ground hone: also some vegetables, well cooked and mashed. This latter I vary as much a.- possible, using water in which vegetables have been cooked to moisten the mash, pro- viding it is not so strongly flavored as to be disagreeable to the: 33 htfnSj as sometimes happens if turnips have been cooked in it. '1 he proportion of vegetable matter given to lien- in winter is much smaller than that given in summer, and also smaller than the other ingredients in the mash. In summer cut grass or clover ami vege- table tops are substituted for the roots given in winter and are fed separately whenever convenient. Dried beef scraps are substituted in summer for the ground bone in winter and are U'(\ in smaller quantities, perhaps half the amount. 1 season with salt rather less than I would for my family. I never use pepper, lint occasionally ginger. When using pepper and seasoning highly with salt, I have always had more or less hens die of liver trouble in spring. My mash is always thoroughly scalded and frequently well cooked, as in winter I often mix it the night before and let it remain in the oven over night. Animal meal I consider a cheap food which will make hens lay; but 1 cannot use it, even in much smaller quantities than the rule, on account of its laxative qualities. "My hens always have warm water in clean drinking vessels in winter and cool water in summer. "The second and last feed comes after dinner, when I hoe or rake into the litter on the hen house floor two parts whole oats to one part wheat. The litter is six or eight, inches deep, and the feed is given generously enough to make them feel rewarded for scratch- ing up to the next afternoon. "Oyster shells I prefer to throw in fresh every day. especially in the latter part of the winter, when they get too busy laying to cat the proper amount of lime. "A neighbor adopted my way of feeding, but with pullets 'nought of me failed to get like results. 1 attribute the failure to the fact that he was afraid of wasting feed, and if he could possibly find a grain would not feed more. In the morning I feed all the hens will eat with a relislu— Miss L. M. S., Auburn, Me. CHAPTER V. food* and food Value*. Readers of the poultry and agricultural press are continually coming across expressions, the meaning of which they hut dimly comprehend. They read of "narrow" and "wide'- rations, "pro- teids" and "carbohydrates," -'concentrates" and "coarse foods." All this in most cases is so much Greek. I have talked with many intelligent poultry keepers, hut have rarely found one who could tell why he fed as he did apart from the fact that his ration had justified itself in experience. And yet a little knowledge of the elementary principles of scientific feeding may he of great value. It will enable a man to feed more economically, as he can often substitute for a. high-priced food one much lower in price, and also to feed so that he can secure the results he is after without loss of time or waste in any way. It is my purpose in this chapter to make the matter of foods and feeding so simple that anyone can understand it. PEOTEIDS— THINGS THAI' BUILD UP. The food that is eaten has three functions to perform. The first is to build up. In the animal body a process of waste and repair is continually going on. Old tissues are breaking down and being replaced by new ones. It is evident that if an exact balance is to be preserved considerable food must be eaten. But besides this process of waste and repair another process may be going on — that of growth and manufacture. In the chick, for instance, the frame is being built up rapidly, the feathers are coming out, and the flesh and muscles receive their daily increment. In the laying hen the egg is being formed. Now there are certain elements in the food that is taken that go to repair the waste and build up the body; they also enter largely into the manufactured product — the milk of the cow and the egg of the hen. These elements are called proteids. They are absolutely necessary to the life and health of the animal, and must be furnished in sufficient quantities or decay and death will ensue. OARBOHYDRATES— THINGS THAT WARM UP. Besides building up food is required for another purpose — to warm up. The temperature of the human body is 98 degrees; 35 that of the hen's body, 103 degrees. To maintain the temperature ofthe body food must be burned in the stomach just as coal is burned in the furnace. You have all noticed on a cold day in win- ter how difficult it is to keep the temperature of a room up to 70, and how much fuel is required to do it. And yet the temperature of the body must be kept 28 degrees above this, or the result will be a chill, from which we may never recover. There are certain elements in the food that go directly to the production of heat, and these are called carbohydrates. They in- clude sugar, starch and gums (sometimes called "nitrogen-free ex- tract"), and the cellulose or fibre (the coarse or woody part of a plant) which, however, is indigestible. The cereals are especially rich in carbohydrates. We sometimes read that the farmers in Kansas and Nebraska, in years when the corn crop is excessive, use corn for fuel; and that is precisely what we do when we feed corn to our hens in the winter. The corn is the fuel which the hen burns to maintain the temperature of her body at 103. Such being the ease, the importance of a warm, snugly-built house to keep down fuel bills becomes at once apparent. In a well conducted manufacturing establishment the fuel that is burned serves a double purpose: it not only generates the steam that warms the building, but it also generates the steam that drives the machinery. Perfectly analogous to this is the service rendered by the food elements that we denominate carbohydrates. They not only keep the body at a proper temperature, but they also furnish the energy by which the work is done. FATS— TPIINGS THAT ARE STORED UP. The careful and prudent head of a household is not content to "live from hand to mouth," as the saying is. He does not buy his coal from day to day, his flour a few nounds at a time, and his vege- tables as he needs them to use. On the contrary he has a well- stocked cellar, in which are enough supplies to last for some time. The thrifty wage-earner does not spend quite all he earns, but saves a certain amount each week, which he deposits in a savings bank or invests in life insurance. Nature, our thrifty mother, is not content that her children shall live from day by day; so she lays by a reserve from which they can draw in time of need. This reserve is the fat which she wraps around the tissues and with which she encases some of the organs. 36 There is one very curious thing that is true of the different food elements — they can take the place of each other, to some ex- tent. This is not true of the proteicls. Nothing can take their place. But it is true of the carbohydrates and the fats. At the New York State Experiment Station a cow was fed for 95 days upon food from which the fat had been extracted as thoroughly as possi- ble. In spite of this absence of food fat the cow continued to secrete milk similar to that produced on a normal ration. Nearly sixty-three pounds of fat was yielded in the milk during the ninety- five days, and the cow gained forty-seven pounds during that time, being judged a much fatter cow at the end than at the beginning. This experiment would seem to he conclusive that the milk fat was produced quite largely, if not entirely, from the carbohydrates of the food. On the other hand, so well is it settled that fat may be converted into carbohydrates, that it is the common practice to multiply the fat by 2.25 to get its equivalent in carbohydrates in making up an equation. Besides these three principal food elements which I have enu- merated there axe subordinate food elements as follows: Ash, rep- resenting the mineral ingredients after a food is burned. These ashes consist of lime, potash, soda, magnesia, iron, phosphoric acid, and sulphuric acid. Water, present in all foods to some extent. Fibre or cellulose, the coarse or woody part of a. plant (already mentioned under the head of carbohydrates, but more appropriately coming here). A BALANCED RATION. WIDE AND NARROW RATIONS. We are now in a position to frame our definitions. A balanced ration is a ration in which all the elements required to meet the needs of the animal for the time being are present in right propor- tion. It will be seen by this definition that a balanced ration is not a fixed and invariable tiling. A ration that is correctly balanced for chicks is not balanced for laying stock, and a ration that is bal- anced for laying stock is not balanced for birds that are being fat- tened for market. It has been found by experience that the ration 1.2 (one part protein to two parts carbohydrates) is about right lor chicks; the ration 1.4 i- about right for laying stock, and the ration 1.6 is about right for fattening. In making up the ration the ingredients arc weighed, not measured, and the fat is multiplied by 2.25 (or 2\) to reduce it to carbohydrates. 37 V wide ration is one in which the protein is largely exceeded by the carbohyd rates; a narrow ration is one in which the protein and carbohydrates are more nearly equal. As a matter of fact, any- thing exceeding 1.6 would be called a wide ration, and anything under it a narrow one. SOME THINGS TO BEAR IN MIND. The reader who has followed me carefully will see how abso- lutely impossible it is to feed a flock of hens by rule. Common sense must come in. A ration that would be correctly balanced for one day would not be balanced for the next. For instance, on a very cold day in winter we burn twice as much coal to keep warm as on a mild day, and on the same day the flock would require a much wider ration (more carbohydrates or warming up food) than on a mild day or in midsummer. Fortunately the hen has considerable power of adjustment, and so survives our well-meaning but bungling and imperfect efforts to feed her scientifically. If we do not feed enough, she draws upon her reserve; and if we feed too much she has the power of passing the excess through the body unassimilated. It is for this reason that I advocate feeding generously. Nature can take care of a surplus if it is not too great, but the only way in which she can meet a deficit is by drawing on her reserve. The reader, too, will now see why it is that one poultryman feeds one way, and another another, and both have good results. The principal thing is to get your ratios with succulent, nutritious food; and if you do this your hens are sure to respond with a goodly output of eggs. GREEN FOODS. AVhat is the value of green food in the daily ration? Its great value is that it makes it more digestible; it lightens up the ration and makes it possible for the gastric juices to permeate every particle. Then, too, green food often contains certain mineral salts that the birds need, in a soluble and digestible form. Green food should form a portion of the daily bill of fare, either in the mash or separately. "In the winter and early spring months, mangel- wurzels, if properly kept, may be fed to good advantage. In feed^ ihg these beets to flocks of hens a very good practice is simply to split the root lengthwise with a large knife. The fowls will then be able to pick out all the fresh, crisp food from the exposed cut 38 surface. Cabbages can be grown cheaply in many localities and make excellent green food so long as they can be kept fresh and crisp. Kale and beet leaves are equally as good and are readily eaten. Sweet apples are also suitable, and, in fact, almost any crisp, fresh, green food can be fed with profit. The green food, in many instances, may be cut fine and fed with the soft food, but, as a rule, it is better to feed separately during the middle of the day, in such quantities that the fowls have about all they can eat at one time." CLOVER AS A FOOD. Clover is the green food, par excellence. Second-crop clover is best. It should be cut just as it is coming into bloom, or a little before, when there is a profusion of tender green leaves and the stalks have not become woody and dry. Great care should be taken in curing the crop. Clover for hens should be cut into short lengths, say one-fourth of an inch, and may be fed alone at noon. Or it may be mixed in the morning mash with boiling water. It is not necessary to steep it over night as some do. Clover is excel- lent, but somewhat expensive. 39 > £ 3 £ -1 »« Q^WiB " £ o g o o SO 5. 09 *■ iseed Is. ?o, Cr en me and illers' Oijoa ~ f V - a t -. ^o T a F* Q tgWPg - B 05 3 "= gs >£. a ■ "0 35 O tj CO * 3 a P r+ " X & g> to hj a X j=. a 5? £ o go W OS C5tO uff'alo. Queen, other s feeds, erm oil alt spn brewers -'to M o - / - 2 *T3 2 c Glol Wau tand meal auts ' gra: n in 5* IX a ?*T3 ? -I CO o Dp g£ff " 1 ^ ' M H ^ 2 a p x P C_ jq = hj M. jg skin, and uten Iried 2 o • a ~ *3 o o OB ^ o oy lour and stand: middlings, mi and wheat bra -O dairy feed, at middlings. £p* 5° ■a v c a *t= a « *2 2 " 3 • o • c to (— 1 = y. t 8 :-5 M to P ta ►^ =: tfB 2 o ■ a i* tD a a; << o -^ Ci -IOC f° £ - *» S O CJ' pO^ Tf. « 5 s „ D £ a a s p ' ° a o._ C F > CD to 1— 1 > i i-j aa ™ a #"C 1 Q >< ye. barley, oat, d hominy meals, oat, U-O horse, daiiy and Sehu- s Stock feeds. -; a 8 4 3 S nS ■y; P a =♦ 1 IT — C B a c T> S" CD r m en X o o 2 Q > r 70 O H m T1 O o D > 2 D O > 70 CO O jC -< O PC > H m (75 40 TABLE SHOWING COMPOSITION AND VALUATION PRINCIPAL FOODS. OF i 'dm pi sition. Valua- tion. +3 ~ c FOOD STUFFS. Cr. SOX sps ; :. — ■g s r s ^ += "" "*< a. fa Z)> meal Hominy meal ( Jround oats ( irou ad barley < lorn and oat feed Victor corn and oat feed. . .. H-O borse feed Quaker dairy feed Shumacher's stuck feed ( >at feed (average) Cereals. ( torn Wheat Oats Barley Buckwheat Kye tiice Milk. Whole milk Skim milk, raised. . . . Skim milk, separated . Buttermilk 7.0 9.0 9.0 8.5 9.5 9.0 8.0 11.0 8.0 10.0 10.0 10.0 10.0 8.0 i 1.3 0.S 6.7 6.9 14.0 11.0 9.0 1.-.0 13.0 10.0 10.0 9.0 8.0 s.o 7.0 10.9 10.5 11.0 in 11 13. ii 11.6 12.4 90.4 90 6 90.1 6.5 5.3 5.5 5 2 1.0 9 1.8 5 . 8 3.8 3.3 4.3 5.3 6.2 3.6 8.0 2.2 6.6 24.5 1.4 1.4 2.6 3.3 2.3 3 3.5 3.3 4.6 4.1 5.3 1.5 1.8 3.0 2.4 2.0 1.9 0.4 45.4 38.3 36 9 34 6 37.2 34.3 31 7 27 1 23.1 10.4 18 1 17 1 16.3 18.3 58.0 57 4 65.1 22.3 9.5 s.o 11.2 11.4 11.3 9.1 s.7 12.5 13 .2 11.5 10.4 11.9 11 8 12.4 10.0 10.6 13.0 3.5 3.1 2.9 3.9 6.1 24.5 8.8 36.3 8.9 37.2 8.6 36 8 2 2 47.9 2 2 51.6 13.6 31.4 11.9 42 6 10.8 49.4 3.2 59.4 7 55 (i S.4 54.6 10.1 53. 1 12.7 53.4 5.3 1.9 69.9 6.7 68.4 I 2 64.2 s.7 60 s 5.7 65.8 10.0 tit. 7 111 63. 1 0..S 62.1 It; 8 54.3 11.4 60.4 21. s 55.3 l 9 70.3 1.8 71.9 9.5 59.7 2 7 69.8 s.7 64.5 1.7 72.5 0.2 23.0 4.8 4.7 4 10.5 2.1 2.5 6.3 2.2 2.0 10.5 1.6 4.9 4.8 5.0 4.6 4.4 4.0 32.0 39.6 16.3 16.5 3.3 3.6 8.5 3.8 1.9 3.2 3.7 3.4 3.1 4.6 2.8 5.0 2.1 5.0 1.8 2.2 1.7 23.6 3.7 0.8 0.3 1.0 1:1 1:1.1 1:1.1 1:1.5 1:1.4 1:1.6 1:1.6 1:1.7 1:3.1 1:3.1 1:3.7 1:3.8 1:3.9 1:3.4 1:1.3 1:1.6 1:0.6 1:1.6 1:8.1 1:8.5 1:7.4 1:6.1 1:6.2 1:7.0 1:8.2 1:5.6 1:4. Ii 1:6.1 1:8 1:7.9 1:6.3 1:6.0 1:6.0 1:7 1:7.2 1:6 1:3.8 1:2 1:2 1:1.6 CHAPTER VI. Eggs in Tall and Winter- Unless a man breeds fancy fowls and has a good rnarkei in the spring for eggs for hatching, the gilt-edged profits come from eggs produced in late fall ami early winter. There is no commodity that I know anything about where the price fluctuates so much in the course of a year as it does on eggs. In the local market eggs range in price from 12 to 15 cents in April and May to 30 to in cents around Thanksgiving. In spite of all that has been written and said about eggs in the late fall and early winter, there is al- ways a shortage about this time, and there is likely to be for years to come. The reason why it is so difficult to get eggs in late fall or early winter is that it is against Nature. The primary object of a bird in laying eggs is not to please the palate of the epicure or add to the profits of the owner, but to reproduce her kind. Now it is a universal law that all creatures in a wild state bring forth their young at that season of the year when food is most abundant. The ben has been domesticated for more than thirty centuries, but back of this is a period of much greater extent when she was wild. No artificial breeding or habitat can ever completely eradicate aboriginal instincts. The natural time for a hen to lay i- in the spring and summer. It is evident, therefore, that in working for eggs in fall and early winter we are working against Nature, and can never hope for that complete success that we may expect when we are working with Nature and Nature is working with us. WINTER EGGS COME EKOM PELLETS. Eggs in the fall and winter come principally from pullets. At Thanksgiving time, when eggs are at their maximum, the hens have not fully recovered from their moult. They may lay a few eggs, but nothing great. Those who get winter eggs in large quantities are those who follow the advice of this book and plan to have at least two-thirds of their laying stock pullets. But not every pullet is a layer. It is only those that are well grown and have been handled right that are now giving a good account of themselves. The first great rule for winter eggs is as follows: Get out your chicks early and keep them coming from the day they break the shell down to the clay they go into the laying pens in the fall. 42 AMERICAN BREEDS BEST. The breed has something to do with it. As a rule the American breeds are the 'nest winter layers. I know that this statement will be challenged, and that instances will be given where the Mediter- raneans or Asiatics have equaled or surpassed the Americans in egg production; but the statement will stand. The Mediterraneans are thin feathered and are very susceptible to climatic conditions. A sudden cold snap will often cause the egg product to drop to zero. The Asiatics, on the other hand, are thick feathered, but slow in maturing — they do not get ready to lay until well on toward spring. The man who wants winter eggs will make no mistake if he fills his pens with well matured pullets of the American class. • A WARM HOUSE ESSENTIAL. In olden times hens were not expected to lay in winter. N<> wonder they did not! They were not hatched out until June, and were expected to pick up their living in the fields. After it be- came too cold for them to roost in trees they were allowed to stay in the barn nights, roosting on the big beams, or were thrust down into the noisome barn cellar. A few handfuls of corn were thrown down to them from time to time, and if they wanted to quench their thirst they could eat. snow or break the ice in the horse trough. It is a marvel they ever lived through the winter, to say nothing of laying eggs. Even to-dav. when poultry keeping is so much better understood, the importance of a warm house is not half enough appreciated. The West Virginia Experiment Station a few years ago scien- tifically demonstrated the importance of a warm house in the pro- duction of winter egos. "Two houses situated side by side and sim- ilar in all respects were selected for the experiment. The houses had been constructed with matched siding and shingle roofs. Be- fore the experiment began, one house was sheathed on the inside with boards and then thoroughly papered so as to cover all the cracks. The experiment began November 24th, and continued for five periods of 30 days each. The two flocks were fed the same kind and amount of food. The total number of eggs produced per 100 hens in the warm house was 5,239, while in the cold house 100 hens laid but 4,136 eggs in the same time, a balance in favor of the warm house flock of 1.103 eggs worth in the local market 24 cents per dozen, or $22.00. It is thus seen that the additional expense for increasing the warmth of the house was a very profitable in- vestment." 43 FEEDING FOR WINTEE EGGS. Readers of the preceding chapter of this book will need no >\>r- cial instruction in the production of winter eggs, but it will do no harm to repeat the substance of what I have said. To get eggs in winter, or, indeed, at any season of the year, it is necessary to feed o-eneronslv. One cannot get something for nothiner, and if one i- to get plenty of eggs from his hens he must supply them with the raw materials for egg making. "Overcrowding and underfeeding are two serious hindrances to a good egg yield; but underfeeding is by far the more serious hindrance to a profitable winters work with the layers." So the second great rule for. winter eggs is: Give plenty of good wholesome Pood and give variety, if you want winter layers. EGG FOODS AND TONIC>. The question comes nr> in this connection as to the expediency of using egg foods and tonics where winter eggs are wanted. On the one hand there are some who recommend their use; on the other there are those who unqualifiedly condemn. Theoretically, I sup- pose, it is better not to use them; but, actually, they may be used occasionally to good advantage. I suppose it would be better for a man never to overwork, but to consume each day only so much energy as he made. But, as a matter of fact, there come occasions into the life of every busy man when he is compelled to work 16 or 18 honrs at a stretch, day after day, and draw upon his reserve. Nature allows him to do this, but only on condition that he make up the deficit as soon as he can. Nature is like a bank that allows a good customer occasionally to overdraw. It will do no harm to stimulate a healthy, well-grown bird a little when eggs are high; but to use stimulants and condition powders habitually is to defeat the very purpose for which, they are made — they either kill the lien or she becomes immune and no longer responds. $100.00 IN GOLD: MOW ME. S. D. FOX WON IT. Some years ago the manufacturers of a well-known condition powder advertised a "Gold Coin Premium Contest" for the best egg record during the winter months, in which $200.00 in gold was to be given to 16 contestants. There was one first prize of $100.00, five prizes of $10.00 each, and ten prizes of $5.00 each. The contest was open to the world. The conditions were that each contestant must keep not less than 12 hens, must buy at least one 44 dollar's worth of condition powder, and must make 1 a full four months' trial. The time for the close of the contest was set at April 1. The first prize was won by Mr. S. D. Fox of Wolfeboro, \. II. Unfortunately Mr. Fox kept no records other than those he sent in, and in a general clearing up of the central office a short time since all records relating to the contest were destroyed. Con- sequently I am unable to give the figures, but it may be enough to state thai ou1 of the hundreds of contestants Mr. Fox won the first prize. I will give his methods, as oearly as possible in his own words. "That fall," said Mr. Fox, J had a master line lot of hens — ■ White Wyandottes, with just a dash of Leghorn blood in "em to make 'em lay. They were hatched early, and I began to get eggs from them in October. "When 1 saw the contest advertised 1 thought I would enter. I didn't expect to get the first prize, but thought possibly 1 might get one of the others. So I bought a dol- lar's worth of condition powder of C. W. Hicks, who then kept the Wolfeboro Drug Store, and started in. I remembered rending in an old book the following sentence: 'There is nothing that will make hens lav equal to cayenne pepper and milk/ I had a cow that came in the fall, which was giving about 16 quarts of milk a day. 1 made n |i a pen of the likeliest looking pullets, and started in. I fed them in the morning a mash made of equal parts of corn meal, ground oats and bran. I didn't know anything about meat meal or ground hone in those days, and so I put in instead a handful of linseed meal and what scraps we had left from the table. I mixed this mash up with warm skim milk. Two or three times a week 1 shook into the milk a teaspoonful of cayenne pepper. I gave the hens all the mash they would eat up clean. At noon I fed oats and at night corn. I gave the hens all the milk they would take. 1 gave it to 'em sweet: 1 gave it to 'em sour; I gave it to 'em in the form of curd. There were davs when they had no water — nothing but milk. Fay? You never saw anything like it! 1 wish I could remember how many they laid. Anyway they laid enough to bring me the first prize of $100.00. Give me cayenne pepper and skirri milk, and I'll risk hut what I can make hens lay every time." R. FOX'S FIEN PEKSUADER ""I can give you a receipt for an egg food and tonic that will do the business," said Mr. Fox. "I sent off once for an egg food that \\a< lnVhlv advertised, and the first thing I knew it had killed five 45 hens. No, I guess 1 won't give you the name Maybe 1 was a lit- tle anxious to have 'em lay, and fed too much of il. I >n t this one I can vouch for. It is the greatest hen persuader I know anything about, T fed it one winter to 72 hens, and one day got 68 egg>. Five days in succession from the same flock 1 got 64 eggs. Take ten pounds bone meal, ten pounds beef scraps, five pounds fenu- greek, two pounds sulphur, two pounds charcoal, one-half pound cayenne pepper, one-half pound salt. Mix and keep. Put a half pint in the mash every morning for 20 hens. When you feed this egg food, feed no meat meal or meat scraps, and do not salt the mash. You will get the mixture right if you remember that the combined weight of the ingredients is 30 pounds. It costs about a dollar and a half to make it.*" TO STAET PULLETS TO LAYING IN THE FALL. When pullets are old enough to lay and do not lay they need some slight shock or change to start them in. The majority of those who rear chickens give them free range, or as near free range as possible, during the summer months. This is correct. But after they get their growth their energies need to be directed to egg production and not run off in useless exercise. Accordingly as early as October 1st — if not before — the pullets should be taken from the range and put into the laying houses. Here their range should be restricted. More meat meal or ground bone may be ad- vantageously introduced into their ration, and a stimulant may be given in the shape of cayenne pepper or condition powder. This treatment soon induces egg production, if they are of the "bred-to- la v" kind. CHAPTER VII. The Sex Element in Egg Production. Why do hens lay at all? This is the most momentous question that confronts the poultryman. If he can answer the question cor- rectly he is in a position to proceed intelligently and systematically with egg production. If he cannot answer it. or has never even thought of it, he is in no condition to get a large and uniform egg yield, fie may make a hit occasionally, but there will be years when egs - s will be i'ew ami Ear between. It is evident to the most casual observer that bens do not lay for their own amusement — for the fun it gives them. Anyone who has ever watched a hen straining to discharge the egw or who has taken an egg out of a nest blood stained from some internal hemor- rhage, must realize that the passage of an egg by a hen is not for her altogether an agreeable operation. Doubtless there is a sense of relief when the egg is expelled — but so there is when a man has had an ulcerated tooth extracted. Nor do hens lay to add to the profits of their owner. It is a common complaint, and one in which there is a good deal of truth, that hens lay only when eggs are cheap and shut down when they are dear! No, hens do not lay for fun or to add to the bank account of their owner; they lay for an alto- g< I her different purpose. Implanted in the core and center of every living thing is the desire to reproduce its kind. It seems to be the design of nature that the species shall be perpetuated at any cost, "Multiply and replenish the earth" is a command addressed to plants, animals and birds as well as to man. So imperious is this instinct of reproduc- tion, so irresistible, that some of the lower orders propagate at the cost of their own lives. The hen lays to gratify the imperious instinct of reproduction. In her wild state the hen lays from six to ten eggs a year. She lays them in some secluded nook in the jungle, that she may rear her little brood. If it were not for this instinct of reproduction the hen would never lay. We have taken this instinct of reproduc- tion, stimulated it so that the domestic fowl now lays from ten to twentyfold as many e^s as her aboriginal ancestress; but have largely forgotten, if we ever knew, that it is the presence of this instinct that makes egg production possible. 47 CONDITIONS OF REPEODUCTION. What are the conditions of reproduction? They arc five, and they are as follows: 1. Maturity. The an una], bird or plant must be in the inter- mediate state between growth and decay. The desire for reproduc- tion is greater at the beginning of this intermediate state, and steadily declines toward its end. This is why a fowl will lay more eggs the first year after coming to maturity than in any subsequent year of her life. 2. Vitality. Reproduction draws upon the vital forces as does no other act. This is why the bird feels a desire to incubate after her litter is completed — she needs rest. The broody hen should be treated with, great consideration, and not ruthlessly abused, as is too often the case. The immediate effect of disease or injury is to weaken the desire for reproduction. A sick hen is not a laying hen. 3. Nutrition. The animal, bird or plant must be well fed. Darwin makes nutrition the principal factor in reproduction. He says: "With hardly an exception our domesticated animals, which have long been habituated to a regular and copious supply of food, without the labor of searching for it, are more fertile than the cor- responding wild animals. The amount of food affects the fertility of even the same individual; thus sheep, which on mountains never produce more than one lamb to a birth, when brought down to low- land pastures, frequently bear twins As Mr. Dixon has remarked, "High feeding, care and moderate warmth, induce a habit of proflig- acy which becomes in some measure hereditary." (Animals and Plants Under Domestication, vol. ii, chap, xvi.) 4. Sanitation. Sanitation profoundly affects vitality, and without sanitation the other conditions cannot produce their full effect. The hen house should be kept perfectly clean, the birds free from parasites; they should not be crowded, and should be sup- plied with everything necessary to comfort and health. 5. Sex. In the very lowest forms of life reproduction is asexual — that is, the new life is produced not by the coming to- gether of male and female, but by fission or cleavage from the parent organism. But all higher animals and plants are repre- sented by distinct male and female forms, and the more com- pletely each form is sexed the greater its power of reproducing its kind. 48 THE SEX ELEMENT IN REPRODUCTION. The importance of the sex element in reproduction has never "been fully understood. Splendid work is being done at experiment stations and by independent investigators in the study of the do- mestic fowl. The trap nest has enabled us to select the hens that la}' the most eggs, and to breed from them. Nutrition has been studied, until we can feed with almost mathematical certainty; but the study of sex has been neglected. It may be that the study of sex requires a knowledge of physiology and biology that is lacking in the case of most poultrymen: but it is here that the richest field lies, and when a man lias mastered the subject of sex he is in a condition to obtain a large am! uniform egg yield with the mini- mum amount of cost and labor. BREED FROM THE BEST SEXED BIRDS. The great secret of large and uniform egg production I believe to be this: Breed from the best sexed birds! Poultry writers are reviving the old question as to whether or not there is an egg type. I am inclined to think there is. But the egg type that I care most about is one based on sex. The male that is the most distinctly male and the female that i- the most distinctly female are the birds for me. By keeping this principle in mind I have succeeded in building up a strain of birds that are splendid layers. 1 do not use the trap nest, and so am not aide to give individual records. I did have a bird once that laid an egg that allowed me to keep tab on her as accurately as if I had used the trap nest. From some peculiarity of the ovaries the egg had a ring around it about one- third of the distance from the smaller to the larger end; it was ivory white in color and of medium size. It was such an egg as I could not very well mistake, hi 14 months and 10 days more than 300 of these eggs appeared. The hen then became broody, and I fool- ishly allowed her to sit. After she had completed the process of incubation and weaned her chicks, so much time had been lost that I did not attempt to keep tab upon her again. I have given up pushing my hens for big egg production, but take what comes along. Whien conditions are right T get from 150 to 200 eggs a year apiece from my best layers and with that 1 am satisfied. HOW I APPLY THE PRINCIPLE OF SFX SELECTION. And now I will tell the readers of 11 1 is chapter how I apply the principle of sex selection. I keep a close watch over my chicks 49 from the day they break the shell, and as soon as one shows' its sex that chick is marked so that I can tell it afterward. When the chicks are three months old the first separation is made; males and females are separated, and the chicks that showed their sex fust are taken from the rest. This gives me four flocks. From the chicks in which the sex element first manifested itself 1 expect to gel my best layers. When it is time to put the birds in the winter quarters another separation is made — the birds that show they are nearest ready to lay are put in pens by themselves. (I do not care for precocious pullets, but when pullets have had time to mature the ones that are nearest ready to lay are in my judgment the best pullets). The final selection for the breeding pens is made when birds are about 18 months old — the ones which moult the earliest and most rapidly being selected for breeders. Thus by a consistent application of the principle of sex selection 1 get my strain. With the males the same principle is applied. The birds that show their sex the earliest and the most strongly are reserved, and the others are killed and sent to the market. Any judge will tell you that "good wattles are a sign of a good bird." But besides having good wattles a breeding cockerel should have other qualities; he should be vigorous, alert, courageous, well grown, with decided protuberances on his shanks where later the spurs are to he. In other words, he should be strongly sexed. I believe that anyone who will consistently and intelligently fol- low out the suggestions given in this chapter will see his egg yield steadily improve, and that in three breeding seasons, with compara- tively little trouble, he will get the 200-egg hen. THE LAW OK SEX: MALES OK FEMALES AT WILL. One of the most interesting problems that confronts the biolog- ist is that of sex. What are the conditions that produce a male organism and what the conditions that produce a female? It is obvious that in a world where everything is by law sex is not by chance, but what the law is we do not fully know. Still many facts have been gathered, and we are nearing the goal. The poultry business offers a peculiarly favorable field for investigation. When you reflect that perfect organisms may be produced in any number in the short space of 21 days, that the parent fowls may be kept under such conditions as the investigator may wish and that these conditions may be varied at will, that the embryo may be followed through all the stages of its development, you realize at once what 50 a field the poultry business presents for a study of the problem of sex, and the business takes on a new dignity and interest. Some very important facts bearing on sex have been gathered. The point on which investigators are more fully agreed is that nutrition has a profound influence upon sex. Beginning with in- sects it has been found that if caterpillars are starved before enter- ing the chrysalis state the resultant butterflies or moths are males, while others of the same brood highly nourished are females. AYitli bees, too, the relation between nutrition and sex seems equally well established. Experiments with Tadpoles, which were supplied with a diet steadily increasing in sumptuousness, showed a steady and corresponding increase in the number of females produced. The proportion of females to males, which was originally 57 to 43, rose steadily as the diet became more and more highly nutritious, until out of 100 tadpoles 92 were females and 8 males. Coming up in the scale of life it has been found that among mammals the same principle holds, although of course other in- fluences come in more than among the lower orders. Another feature that is believed to have an influence upon sex is the time of impregnation. The fresher the ovum when fertilized the greater the likelihood that the offspring will be a female. If this conclusion is correct eggs laid at the beginning of a litter should hatch a larger proportion of pullets than eggs laid later. The relative age of the parents is believed to affect the sex. Where the male parent is the older the offspring are preponder- ating^ male, and where the ages are even, or where the mother is the superior in age, the preponderance is the other way. I find that this is a theory quite generally held. I sometimes receive letters from would-be purchase]- asking lor eggs from hens mated with cockerels. It is a theory very easy to test, and the reader should give it a trial in his yards. Temperature is also a feature to be reckoned with. I have noticed in my own yards that in the cold months the proportion of pullets hatched is smaller than it is later in the season. Take the plant lice which multiply so rapidly upon the rose bushes, fruit trees, and the like, and which are known to science as aphides. ''During the warmth of summer, when food is abundant, these insects produce parthenogenetically nothing but females, while in the famines of later autumn they give birth to males. In striking confirmation of this fact it has been proved that in a con- servator} where aphides enjoy perpetual summer, the partheno- 51 gentic succession of females continued to go on for four years, and stopped only when the temperature was lowered and food dimin- ished." In my own experiments and observations I have found several things influencing sex that I have not found mentioned by the au- thorities. One of these is affinity. I have found that where there is perfect affinity, and the birds are happy and con- tented, the conditions are right for the production of females; but where tine birds are not well mated and frequent quarrels ensue the offspring are likely to be largely males. Another thing is free- dom from disturbance and fear. Where hens are kept stirred up by the presence of strangers or shifted frequently from place to place their eggs are quite sure to hatch an excess of males. The quieter you can keep your hens the more pullets you will get. . The greater the number of females to a male the more pullets. 1 know a man who mated two roosters to 118 hens, and out of 135 chickens hatched 107 were females. Now let me sum up all that has been said in the language of another: "Such conditions as deficient or abnormal food, low tem- perature, deficient light, moisture and the like, are obviously such as would tend to induce a preponderance of waste over repair — a katabolic habit of body — and these conditions tend to result in the production of males. Similarly, the approved set of factors, such as abundant and rich nutrition, abundant light and moisture, favor constructive processes, that is, make for an anabolic habit, and these conditions result in the production of females. With some element of uncertainty we may also include the influence of the age and of physiological prime of either sex, and of the period of fertili- zation. But the general conclusion is tolerably secure, that in the determination of sex influences inducing katabolism (or waste) tend to result in the production of males, as those favoring anabolism (or repair) similarly increase the probability of females.'*' This is the law of sex, so far as it can be stated at present. CHAPTER VIII The Tra|) Nest and It* Uses. Within the past few years the outfit of the poultryman lias been enlarged by the addition of the trap nest. As to the practical value of these nests there is a wide difference of opinion; on th\\ MATT' HE BIRDS The only bird lit to breed from is one that is in good health and thoroughly mature. Probably the bcsl mating is a vigorous. well-grown cockerel with year-old liens; next to that a cock with mature pullets. A pullet should have laid out at least one litter- before she is put into a breeding pen. Even then it is better not to use her, if you can help it. There is no surer way of running out a Hock than to breed from immature hud-. THE MALE. You often hear il said that '"the rooster i- half the pen." It is meant by this that one-half the blood of the offspring will come from the male side. Such being the case it is highly important that the cock or cockerel should he a good bird. A few para- graphs back I spoke of the fact that the hen in her wild state laid from six to ten eggs a year. The average farmers hen lays from 7£ to l" 1 ' ".ans in the same time. What has made the increase?' It has come, as 1 have said, from improved nutrition and from selection. But the selection has all been on the male side! It is the practice on the farm, and I doubt not has been for generations, to keep the best male to breed from, but to breed indiscriminately from the females. The fact that under such haphazard methods of keeping fowls as have prevailed in the past, egg production has increased tenfold, is a remarkable tribute to the value of the male as an agent in building up the egg yield. CONCERNING CROSSES. You will find a strong tendency on the part ol the average poultry keeper to mis up his birds. If he gets a flock of fowls that begin to look- alike, ten to one he will buy a rooster of a neighbor fm a dollar of some entirely different breed, and the re- sult will be that the next fall he will have a whole poultry show on has hands. There is a popular belief that crosses lay better than thoroughbreds, and the method of procedure is to mix up the birds as much as possible. This whole subject of crossing needs to be better understood. Some good must comi from crossing, or it would not be so uni- 59 versally practiced. Where does ii come from? It comes from the invigoration thai alway> follows the introduction of new blood. The cross-breed pullet lavs better than its mother because ii is larger and stronger — it can eat ami assimilate more and stand the strain of egg production better. The average farmer's flock is con- stantly running out. He does not breed from bis best. The in- troduction of new blood counteracts this tendency. Consequently the farmer is converted to a belief in the superiority of the cross. But when yon go beyond tbe first cross — when you criss-cross, as they say — yo\i strike another tendency — the tendency to rever- sion. Tbe mixing up of bloods results in bringing out ancestral characters. Tbe criss-cross is not. far removed from the red jungle fowl, and there inevitably comes a drop in egg production. All the valuable results that come from crossing can 'he secured by the occasional infusion of new blood from a male of tbe same biced as your own. and the breed may be kept more pure. It is not necessary to introduce new blood oftener than once in two years. Suppose you send away for a cockerel this fall. Tbe first mating will be with birds with which he is entirely unrelated. Next fall mate him to the best pullets of his own get. and take the best cockerel to mate with the hens in the other breeding pen. If you find a strain of birds that you like follow along with the breeder, getting a male from has yards every two years. Breeders for fancy points breed in and in, and have a chart of matings that is as intricate as a bicycle road map. It is impossible to produce show birds that will win m the hottest competition without in and in breeding. Rut tbe reader of this book has no necessity to resort to any such procedure — that is, if he is after eggs fit si and not feathers and frills. FERTILE EGGS AND HOW TO GET THEM. To get fertile eggs three thdngs are necessary — maturity, vital- ity, comfort. The conditions in tbe breeding pen must be such as to promote maximum vitality. Where the male is immature, where the house is so cold that the food eaten goes to maintain the caloric, where the fowls are alive with vet mm or rotten with disease, the fertility will be low. Inbreeding also tends to infertility. So does lack of exercise and overfat condition of fowls in the breeding pen. Doubtless diet has an important effect upon fertility. Unless every element needed for tbe embryo is present, tbe egg will be 60 infertile or the chick will die in the shell. There are some kinds of food thai stimulate the genital organs and promote sexual activity. Raw onions chopped fine and fed in the mash twice a wtek are excellent during the breeding season. Clover is also a valuable food for fertility. Where fertile eggs are wanted the hen must not be pushed too hard for egg production. My own method is to push my pullets the first year. I reserve the best layers to breed from, and do not push them the second year; but let them take things easy. They have made their record ami deserve a rest. When the breeding season comes they are in prime condition, and lay large, highly colored eggs which batch hardy chicks. It pays to alternate males where high fertility is desired, allow- ing three males for two pens, keeping two in active service and the third shut up to rest. Cocks have their favorites, and where one male runs with a flock some hens are neglected: but wh*ere males are alternated all are likelv to be served. Mam eggs i'ail to batch because they are not properly cared for. It tikes hut little to kill the germ. One reason farmers get such poor results in winter is that they are not careful to gather their eggs several times a day. The opinion is common among them that an egg must he frozen hard enough to crack the shell before it is unfit to put under a hen. Eggs should be gathered when warm and kept in a temperature of from 40 to 60 degrees. In shipping eggs to customers they should be moved in the middle of the day and protected from extremes of temperature as much as possible. WHY EGGS AEE NOT FEETILE IN WINTER. Almost every winter some person of my acquaintance buys an incubator and starts in to raise broilers for the city market. The result is inevitably disappointment. The percentage of fertility is so low and the mortality among the chicks so great, that the books show a loss instead of a profit at the end of the season. The rea- son why the fertility is so low in winter is purely physiological. "The testicles of birds vary greatly in size according to the season of the year in which they are observed. In winter they are very small, with a comparatively insignificant blood supply; but in spring, as the breeding season comes on, they enlarge to five or ten times the weight during winter, the vessels are distended with blood and the height of functional activity is reached.'* To get fertile eggs in winter, therefore, the house must be warm, or eggs must be imported from the South. CHAPTER X. Incubation -Artificial and Natural. As the poultry business is now conducted it is the practice for each poultryman to get out enough chicks in the spring to supply him with layers in the fall. There is no reason, however, why the great law of specialization should not obtain in the poultry business as in nearly every other, and why in the future we should not have entire plants devoted to the rearing of young stock and other plants devoted wholly to the production of eggs. At present, how- ever, it is necessary for the poultryman to know how to raise his own chicks, if he wishes to succeed. It is a good rule on a poultry farm to have at least two-thirds of the laying stock pullets. Suppose then a man intends to keep 300 head of laying stock always on hand — it will be necessary for him to get out at least 600 chicks. Of these one-half (or 300) are likely to be males: so that at the start he will have but 300 females. The poultryman must count on some deaths by disease and acci- dent. There will he some weak ones that are better off put out of the way. Thien he should watch his flock carefully and cull closely. according to the principles laid down in Chapter VII. The man who gets out 600 chicks in the spring will be lucky if he has 200 standard bred pullets in the fall. CSE LEG BANDS. Pullets when they are put in the laying pens should be marked with leg bands. It is not necessary to use bands with numbers; plain bands are just as good. It is my personal practice to mark birds hatched in the even years (years that can be divided by two) with a band on the right leg; and birds that are hatched in the odd years (years that cannot be divided by two) with a band on the left leg. In this way I can always tell at a glance jii>i how old a bird i>. and never confuse a pullet and a year-old hen. INCUBATOE OR HEN, WHICH? Sooner or later the poultryman must face the question with which this paragraph is headed, and it is my purpose no^ to help him to an answer. In this matter, as in most others, then is 62 something- to be said on both sides. In favor of the natural method there is first of all economy. It costs at least $25 to install an outfit for artificial incubation, and this is an expense that many can ill afford. Chickens brooded by liens have more stamina and arc subject to fewer diseases than chickens brooded in any other way. There is no mother for a brood of young chickens that can equal an old hen. Some of the most progressive poultrymen in the country use hens exclusively, setting hundreds of them at a time. The disadvantage of the natural method is that it is never com- pletely under one's control. Whatever mental qualities a hen may or may not possess, she has a full-grown, large-sized will; and no method has yet been discovered to make a hen sit when she does not want to. To realize the largest profits in poultry, chickens musi he hatched early and kept growing from the day they leave the shell. It is not always possible to have a supply of sitting hens on hand. The sitting hen is liable to leave her nest before her task is done, and no amount of persuasion will induce her to re- turn. Sometimes she crushes eggs or young chicks under her clumsy feet. At the best she can bring out but a few chickens at a time. After a while the up-to-date poultryman is almost certain to come to the conclusion that he must have an incubator. The advantage of the artificial method is that it is so com- pletely under one's control. The incubator may be started at any time. The best machines are so adjusted that the element of chance is practically eliminated, and every fertile egg may be in- cubated. The trouble comes in rearing the chickens. Brooder chickens require much more attention and are more subject to dis- ease than chickens brooded under hens. The per cent, of loss is greater. Especially among beginners there is sometimes a "-laughter of the innocents" that is frightful. To sum up: If one wants early chickens and wants them in quantities and has the time to give to them, he should by all means gel an incubator. Otherwise he would best stick to the hen. GET A GOOD lN T OrBAT()E Oil \0\ T E. In purchasing an incubator remember that the besl i- the cheapest. A poor machine is dear at any price. Beware of the home-made incubator. Sometimes they work satisfactorilv, but oftener they do not. I know a young man of more than ordinary ingenuity who constructed an incubator from plans that he found 63 in a paper. By visiting the machine at intervals during the day and by getting up two or three times a nigh.1 to trim the lamp or to pull out plugs so that the surplus heat might escape, he was able to keep the temperature somewhere near where it ought to he. But one warm Sum lay, while he was at church, the temperature took a leap upward, ami when he returned at noon the thermometer registered 120 degrees. As a consequence 180 chickens were pre- maturely roasted, and nearly three weeks of valuable time lost. The young man has lost confidence in incubators, and now hatches his chickens with hens. An incubator should be bought at least a month before it is to he started on eggs, in order that the operator may become thoroughly familiar with the machine and know how to run it right. A NATURAL HEN" INCUBATOR. The work of caring for sitting hens may be greatly reduced by 'the construction of what 1 may call a natural hen incubator, the design for which is shown here. This natural hen incubator may be of any length; but should be two feet deep, two feet high, and divided into compartments 18 A Natural Hen Cncubator. inches wide. Some prefer a door to each compartment, but I find it more convenient to have the doors somewhat longer, so that one may enclose a number of divisions. The top should be hinged at the back, so that it can be lifted up if desired, as shown in the cut; but ordinarily it is shut down. The door in front is covered with chicken wire. Each, compartment should be in two divisions, so if a lien wishes to leave her nest temporarily she can do so. If possible, enough hens should be set at one time to utilize all the compartments behind a door. The door should be kept latched except in the morning when it is opened, the hens taken 64 off, fed and watered and left to dust. In from 10 to 20 minutes, according to the weather, the hens should he driven back. As the hens are all set at the same time it makes no difference which com- partment a hen enters. She will find epos ready for her. THE SITTING HEN. Where incubation is carried on by the natural method it is im- portant to have a supply of sitting hens on hand in March. April and May. in order that the chicks may be hatched early. While it is hue thai no method has yet been discovered to make a hen sit at will, it is also true that the instinct may be encouraged. As soon as we understand the philosophy of incubation we may go to work to bring about the desired result. In a state of Nature when does the hen sit? In summer. Why in summer? Because the- reproductive instinct has been stimulated by the hot weather. Be- cause she has laid her litter out. Because she has become fat and sluggish. It is evident that if we can reproduce these conditions. we can hasten incubation. Old hens make the best sitters, because they are not so active as. young ones. The treatment of hens that are kept for sitters should be radically different from the treatment of hens that are kept for layers. They should be confined more closely and fed differently. Corn should be form an important part of their food. As soon as a hen shows symptoms of broodiness she should be encouraged. She should be taken at night and placed in a nest prepared for her in a dark, quiet place. This nest should contain china eggs, and should be covered with a burlap bag to make it dark. The next morning the bag should be removed and the hen let out for food and water. If she goes back it is safe to entrust her with real eggs. The comfort of a sitting ben should be scrupulously looked after. Before she is placed on the nest she should be thoroughly dusted v i tli some good insect powder and again just before she- brings off her brood. She should be taken off the nest, fed and watered and given a chance to dust herself every day. Sitting hens should be led on whole corn, as that is slowly digested and is a beat-forming food. TESTING THE EGGS. While it is essential that the sitters be kept as quiet as possible,, yet it is important that the eggs be tested once or twice during the- 65 period of incubation. Egg testers ran be purchased at a Low pi ice from the manufacturers of incubators or at poultry supply store-. Eggs must be tested in a dark room or at night. The first test should be made at the expiration of seven days. If the egg, when looked at in the tester, is clear, it is infertile and should be re- moved from the nest. If the egg when looked at is cloudy or dark, with a well defined air space at the big end, incubation has begun. The water test, described in the next section, should be made on the 19th day, and eggs with dead germs in them taken out. THE WATER TEST. Where a sitting hen does not have a chance to get out doors, her owner should snpph'' moisture to make good the loss to the eggs by evaporation. Eggs should be sprinkled on the 7th and on the 14th day. Remove the hen from the nest and with a whisk broom sprinkle the eggs thoroughly with water of a temperature of 95 de- grees. On the 19th day the eggs should be given a bath. Fill a pail with water of the temperature of 95 degrees, and after it has become still drop the eggs in it one by one, letting them remain from one to three minutes. If there is a lively chick in the egg in a minute or two it will begin to bob up and down as a float does on the water when a fish is nibbling at the bait below. Take the egg out and put it back in the nest, wiping it with a towel if it is win- ter, but letting the surplus water remain if it is summer. In case an egg does not show any movement after being in the water three minutes — if it does not "jump" — you might as well throw it away, as it will not incubate. Chicks from eggs treated in this way come out strong and clean and make a surprising growth. CHAPTER XL Chicks and Their Care. Poultry keeping is not with me a means of livelihood, but is more in the nature of a recreation. It is a matter of personal pride with me, however, to make poultry keeping pay. I do not at pres- ent get out my own chicks, but supply eggs to those who have a knack for the business and let them hatch, chicks for nre and keep them until they are weaned. Then I select what I want in accord- ance with the principles laid down in Chapter VII. People often wonder how I get such a growth on my chicks after I take them into my hands. The reason is very simple. I select only as many chicks as I have room for and 1 keen chicks of the same age to- gether. The average poultry keeper gets out altogether too many chicks. There is a temntation when eggs are hatching well to se1 every hen that is broody or to fill up the incubator just once more. There is plenty of room for the chicks at first, but as they grow older they are crowded and do not do so well as they ought. Then when chicks of different ages are left together, there is too much "rough house" for the younger ones and they become stunted. If you want fine birds get out only as many chicks as you have room for, divide them into small flocks, and keep chicks of the same age by themselves. WHY NOT INSTALL A BROODER? Even where an incubator is not employed a brooder may be in- stalled to good advantage. I know a man who gets out in the neighborhood of 1,000 chicks every spring — hatching them all un- der hens and brooding them in brooders. I am as great an ad- mirer of the American hen as any other man, but I confess that her conduct as a mother is often not such as to impress me with nn exalted opinion of her mentality. The best brooder, in my opinion, is one built for 100 chicks, and costing about $12, just as the best incubator is one built for 200 eggs or thereabouts. The out-door brooder is not generally satisfactory, as it is difficult to keep chicks warm enough in it when the temperature ranges low. The brooder should be placed in a brooder house, and there is no better brooder house in my opinion than the colony community house described in Chapter II. 67 Be sure to set the brooder where the sun will tioi shine on it, in installing it in a house, and do not pu1 more than 60 chicks in a 100-chick brooder. REMOVING CHICKS TO BROODER. We will now assume that the period of incubation is completed, and that the chicks are ready to be removed from the nest. It is 24 hours at least since the last chick broke the shell, and may be 48 hours since the first hardy pioneer made his entrance into our sinful world. I assume that two or three times while the chicks were hatching you gently lifted up the mother hen and removed the fragments of broken egg shell from the nest. And now comes the most important and in some ways the most disagreeable part of the whole business — the transfer of the chfccks from the nest to the brooder, which may be some distance away. You cannot choose your day — it may be cold or it may be warm — but you can choose the warmest part of it for your purpose. Bet- ter take your wife with you, if you are fortunate enough to have one. Take a shallow basket, such as is used for marketing, and line thie bottom with a piece of old woolen blanket, which has pre- viously been warmed. Over this lay another piece of warmed blanket, to put over the chickens when they are placed in the basket. As each chicken is taken out from under the hen anoint its head lightly with lard or vaseline, to kill head lice, and place it quickly in the basket. When the basket is full take the chicks to the brooder house and place them in the hover, which has been brought to a temperature of 100 degrees. If you are a man of tender sensibilities you will feel as if you were a kidnapper or a manstealer when you take the chicks away from their mother. You will feel, as one man expressed it to me, "too mean to look a hen in the face." But, fortunately, the hen does not suffer long — she soon forgets. Place her in a bright, sunny pen where there are other hens and a male, supply her with more varied food than she has been accustomed to during the period of incubation, and in a W days she will be scratching and singing as merrily as of yore TWO SECRETS OF SUCCESS— HEAT AND FEEDING. Th/G two great secrets of success in raising brooder chicks are proper heat and proper feeding. The heat should come from over- head, as this is the most natural method, and should be hot air 68 Bear in mind that the young chick needs a great deal of heat. Ee has come from a warm place — the temperature of his mother's body being 103 degrees. For the first two or three days the tem- perature in the brooder should he 95 degrees; then it may be grad- ually lowered, as the chicks grow, until it drops to 80 degrees if the weather is warm and pleasant. "The best rule to follow is to observe the chicks. ... If they arrange themselves at the edge of the brooder, and separate, by spreading out, the heat will be just what they desire. If too cool they will come closely to- gether and crowd. Many operators have left their chicks ap- parently contented at night, only to find in the morning some of them dead under the brooder, because the heat lowered and the chicks trampled among themselves in the effort to secure more warmth, and this, too. when (to the operator) there seemed to be sufficient. " CARE OF THE BROODER. The brooder is to be the home of the chicks until they are al least six weeks old. It is a good idea to keep the brooder in the brooder house until August, and the on the cold, wet days which we sometimes have in summer give the chicks a little heat. The floor of the brooder should be kept sprinkled with sand, and should lie cleaned every morning. The floor of the brooder house should also be kept covered with clean sand, and the windows should be opened every warm and sunny day. There is no hurry to get the chicks out on the ground; indeed, it is better for them to spend the first four weeks of their lives indoors. The brooder should be enclosed with a low fence of boards for the first few days, so that the chicks cannot get far away. They should be given their first feeds in the brooder and watered there, but in a little while the feed tray and fountain may be placed out- side the brooder, but close to it. Grit of some kind should be supplied. HOW TO FEED BROODER CHICKS. . My method of feeding brooder chicks is as follows: The first week or ten days I feed rolled oats and nothing else — just the same kind of rolled oats that I use on my own table. I feed them dry. I feed them in little troughs' made for the purpose, and keep oats before the chicks all the time. Every day or two I take the (roughs and empty the oats remaining in them into the hens' dish, 69 and brush out the troughs with a whisk broom. It may seem extravagant to feed rolled oats at five cents a pound, but I believe the foundation of a clink'- constitution and future growth is Laid in the first few weeks of its life, and it is cheaper in the end to feed as I do and have the chicks live and thrive than to leed some- thing else and have them stunted and die. At the end of a week or ten days I begin to introduce a little variety. I take wheat and cracked corn — one part wheat to two parts corn — and feed a small quantity of this in place of the rolled oats. I increase the quantity of wheat and corn from dav 10 day and decrease the quantity of rolled oats, so that when the chicks are a month old I have weaned them from the rolled oats and am feeding them on whole wheat and cracked corn. When the chicks are ten days old I begin to give them green food — a little at first, but increasing in amount from day to day. I feed onion tops, cabbage chopped fine, clover tips, or if I can get nothing better a potato baked and cut in two. I give meat in small quantities two or three times a week. Into a kettle of boiling water I put a piece of cheap meat or a soup bone with considerable meat adher- ing, and keep it there until well cooked. Then I pour off the liquid and take the meat and chop it into fine bits, or grind up the bone in my bone cutter, and throw a little to the chicks. They eat it greedily. I put a little salt in the water so that it will get into the fibres of the meat, because I think chicks need a certain amount of salt. I feed in this way until the chicks are "feathered out," when I begin to feed them much as I do my hens — a warm mash, and two or three feeds of grain a day. Until my chicks are "feathered out" I keep food before them all the time, letting them help them- selves when they will. I ought to add that I am careful to keep cool, fresh water befor them from the very first, and also charcoal and grit. BROODER CHICKS— WHAT ANOTHER MAN THINKS. Writes C. A. Stone in the Poultry Standard: "I generally leave the chicks in the incubator about 24 hours after they are practic- ally through hatching, and meanwhile heat a brooder to 95 degrees for about every 50 or GO chicks. At first I strew the front of the brooder with fine grit, and then give them bread crumbs or wheat screenings or Cyphers Chick Food for their first feed — just what they will eat up clean — and give them all the water they want. I 70 generally feed abcmi five times a day the first two or three days, and gradually drop off to three feeds at three weeks. However, after the first two or three days I scatter their feed in a little litter, and make them hustle for it. Nothing under the sun will kill young chicks quicker than stuffing them and letting them stand around. I also give them green food of some sort and every two or three days a mash containing appearance and it is desirable to reinforce the health of the fowls, a good tonic should be given. Douglas Mixture is one of the best, and is used by poultrymen even-where. Tt is made a- follows: Sulphate of iron, 8 oz. Sulphjuric acid, |- oz. Water, 1 gal. Put into a bottle or jug one gallon water, add the sulphate of iron: as soon as the iron is dissolved add the acid. When the mix- 79 "hire is clear it is ready for use. Dose, a tablespoonful to every quart of drinking water. The drinking vessels while using this tonic, in ust he glass or glazed earthenware. MOULTING. Moulting is not a disease, in the sense thai it is something ab- normal or unnatural: hut it is a disease in the sense that it is a state of discomfort or dis-ease. For best results in vgg production "birds should be helped through the moult, and the time should he made as brief as possible. Remove all males from the flock as soon as moulting begins, ■for it is best for both the males and females to be separated at this "time. Feed about as usual, only be sure that plenty of meat or green ground bone is given in the daily ration, and that plenty of ■green food is always at hand. Three times a week in dry, bright weather put a tablespoonful of flowers of sulphur in the mash for ■every 50 fowls, and on alternate days a tablespoonful of carbonate ■ of iron. Do not give the carbonate of iron to white fowls, for it will give the feathers a creamy or brassy tinge. If this treatment "is kept up during the entire moult the birds will get through •easily, as there will he no loss of strength, nor will any of them .hang in the moult, but keep on until completed. EGG EATING: HOW TO PREVENT IT. Egg eating is a vice that is much easier to prevent than to cure. "Where the eggs are gathered at frequent intervals, where the hens are supplied with plenty of material for making shells, where the "hens are kept busy when not on the nests, egg eating is practically unknown. The only sure cure for egg eating is the hatchet. Before this is applied, however, an effort should be made to stop the vice. Two or more china eggs should be placed in each nest, and plenty of these eggs strewn in the litter upon the floor. Then pare the upper beak of the guilty bird until it shows v signs of bleeding, so that when she strikes at the china eggs the pain will make her stop. Generally this will effect a cure. Something can be done by having the nests in a dark place and so arranged that it is dif- ficult for the hen to get at the egg after she has laid. A nail keg makes an excellent nest for egg-eating hens. I have known men to make a double-decked nest, so that the egg after being laid 80 would drop through a small hole into the receptacle below. Raw salt pork, chopped line, is recommended for egg-eating hens; but the best thing is never to allow them to contract the habit. Mr. S. D. Fox. to whom I have several times referred, has a method of breaking hens of egg eating as novel as it is efficacious. "My bens got to eating eggs one spring," he says, ''and I went to work to cure them. I got an egg. chipped off one end and took out tbe yolk and white. Then I filled up the egg with soft soap, sprinkled in a good stiff dose of cayenne pepper, stuck on the end with white court plaster, and dropped the egg on the hen house floor. They ate that egg. Tbe next day I gave 'em another. They ate that. The next day I gave 'em a third. They didn't eat that, and they never ate another so far as I know. Didn't like the flavor, I guess. Hurt 'em? Wall, no, I never see that it did. Might have deaned 'em out a little — soft soap is good for that, yon know — but it didn't rumple a feather, so far as I could see.'" CHAPTER XIII. Products and By-Product*. Producing the eggs and rearing the chicks form but ;i part, and perhaps the smallest part, of the poultryman's business. In order to make money he must market the product to the best advantage- It is here, I am convinced, that the majority of poultrymen fail. They are not good business men. They work hard enough, but do not calculate closely and do not sell at the right time or at the right place. In these days when competition is so close and the margin for profit so narrow, the difference between profit and loss in the poultry business may consist in the maimer in which the product is put on the market. The man who keeps but a few hens and does not make poultry raising his principal occupation, will probably do better to sell his eggs and poultry to his regular grocer than to hunt up private cus- tomers. It is true that he may receive a cent or two a dozen more if he sells at houses, but this is more than offset by the loss in time. The grocer is not so particular about his eggs, so long as they are fresh, as is the private customer, and will take eggs of all sizes and color-. It is true he does not wish to pay in cash, but the profit on his goods is about the only profit he makes on the trans action; for the grocer is often compelled to sell eggs for just whal ho -rive for them. The grocers are the great buyers of eggs throughout the land. The man who keeps hens on a larger scale, and who wants to make the most out of the business with the least trouble, will do well to make an arrangement with a city grocer to ship him a eer- tain number of cases each week throughout the year. The poultry- man should go to the city and see the grocer personally. The chances are he will get an order. This is far more profitable than selling 10 the local grocer. In the town where I live I have seldom known eggs to go above 30 cents a dozen, and they remain at this figure but a short time, while in the cities to the south of us they sometimes sell as high as 45 or 50 cents. The poultryman who produces a gilt-edged product can often market to private customers to advantage. The hotels will take 82 a limited number of fano\ fresh eggs. They do not take so man; a- one would think, because in cooking they use cold storage eggs. Clubs arc good customers, and will pay a fancy price for a fancy article. Druggists use a Large number of brown eggs in connection with their soda trade and will often pay a good price for fresh eggs of good color. There are private families that will gladly pay the poultryman the same price they have to pay for eggs at tne store, and pay in cash. The advantage of having private cus- t( mers is, that one can sell them beside eggs, poultry, vegetables, ci earn, berries and other products of the farm and garden. PRESERVING EGGS. There is always a time in spring when eggs are very cheap. The poultryman can add to his profits and at the same time relieve the congestion in the market by improving this opportunity to lay down a supply of eggs for home consumption Tor the year to come. I do not believe in sidling these preserved eggs for fresh eggs, but there is no reason why the poultryman should not use them in bis own family. Neither is there any objection to selling them in the fall, provided the\ are sold for just what they are — preserved eggs and not fresh eggs. I know a man who every spring when eggs are cheap lays down LOO dozen, and then about Thanksgiving sells them for a little less per dozen than is asked for the best freshieggs, clearing up about $60 by the deal. A profit of 150 per cent, in six months leaves Wad Street out of sight. There are two absolutely sure methods o\' keeping eggs, both of which I print. These meth- ods are the soluble glass and the lime water method-. Of the two I pr< fer the soluble glass, as cleaner and more convenient. Bear in mind, however, that no method under the sun will keep eggs fresh which are not fresh when laid down! LIME WATER METHOD. Slack four pounds lime, and then add four pounds salt, stirring well together. Add eight gallons water. Stir and leave to settle Thie next day stir again. After the mixture has settled the second time draw off or carefully dip out the clear liquid. Take two ounces each of baking soda, cream of tartar, saltpetre, and a little alum. Pulverize and mix. and dissolve in two quarts boiling water. Add this to the lime water. Put the eggs in a stone jar. small end down, one layer on top of another, and pour on the solution. Set tin jar away in a cool place. This process has been secret in the 83 past, .-nul the recipe has been widely sold for $5. The method is quite satisfactory, although, no1 so good as the method of preserv- ing in soluble glass, as the eggs are liable to have a somewhat limy taste. SOLUBLE GLASS METHOD. Soluble glass, or sodium silicate, is a liquid of a rather smooth, slippery consistency, readily soluble in water. It is u^a\ by physi- cians for coating bandages, where it is desired to protect the injured part from the air, and may be obtained through any druggist at a cost of about ?'5 cents a gallon. For preserving eggs use one part soluble glass to about 10 parts pure water. Put the eggs in a stone jar, small end down, one layer on top of another until the jar is filled, then pour on the solution. If the specific gravity of tin solution is greater than that of the eogs, a- is sometimes the case, add water until the eggs will just sink SALICYLIC ACID A .VI) COLD STOEAGE. The West Virginia Agricultural Experiment Station has been studying methods of preserving eggs, and finds that the treatment with salicylic acid followed by cold storage is quite efficacious. The station does not claim that the method has passed the experi- mental stage, and does not advise anyone to use it except in an experimental way. It is worth trying, and is as follows: "Sub- merge the fresh eggs for 5 or 10 minutes in a solution of one ounce of salicylic acid in one quart of strong alcohol, and imme- diately on removing the eggs from the solution, and while they are still wet, wrap them in sterilized cotton and store in a box or barrel in a dry room, the temperature of which does not go above (>0 de- crees Fahrenheit." WOOD ASHES OH SALT. There are many, however, who desire a simpler method than any of these described, and to such 1 would recommend either wood ashes or salt. Wood ashes are excellent. Experiments conducted by the National Agricultural School in Germany show that eggs may be kept a year packed in wood ashes, with a loss of only '20 per cent. Wood ashes are cleanly, convenient and always at hand. Salt also is good. Use a grade of salt a little coarser than table salt — what is called coarse-fine salt. Pack the eggs in a stone jar. Put in first a layer of salt, then a layer of eggs, and so on until the jar is filled. Stand the eggs upon the small ends, and do not let them touch. Cover them completely with salt. Set the jar in a 84 cool place. I have known eggs packed in this way' to keep a year, and to be as good at the end of that time for cooking as if laid hut a few days before. • POULTRY MANURE— A \ ALU ABLE BY-PRODUCT. Poultry manure is an exceedingly valuable by-product. It is a highly stimulating manure. It is also a rich plant food. Poultry manure is more than twice as valuable as sheep or hog manure, and more than three times as valuable as ordinary stable manure, as the following table will show: CC "3_ O r^ C Per cent. Per cent. Per cent- Sheep 0.768 0.391 0.591 $3.30 Pigs 0.840 0.390 0.320 3.29 Cows 0.426 0.290 0.440 2.02 Horses 0.490 0.260 0.480 2.21 Poultry Manure .... 0.800 to O.500 to 0.800 to 7.07 2.000 2.000 0.900 Poultry manure is so powerful that great care must be taken in applying it. It should never be allowed to come into direct con- tact with the roots of the growing plant. When applied in the hill it should be well mixed with the soil. Poultry manure supplies nitrogen in large quantities in the form of ammonia, but ammonia being a highly volatile product is rapidly dissipated. The problem of the poultrvmen, therefore, in dealing with ben manure is to find some substance that will fix the ammonia. Sifted earth is not good, for it is apt to contain eria which art destructively on the ammonia compounds. WOod ashes are worse than nothing, for they do not hold ammonia, but drive it off by their caustic alkaline properties. The best thing I have found to preserve the ammonia in hen manure is gypsum or land plaster, which may be bought for 50 cents per 100 pounds. Scatter a few handfuls of plaster over the droppings before you remove them in the morning, and see that it is thoroughly incorporated. The result is a compound as valu- as any commercial fertilizer. The droppings from a fowl in one year, when treated in this way, are worth one-half what it costs to feed her. CHAPTER XIV. The End of the Two Hundred Egg Hen. The poultryman who keeps from 300 to 500 head of laying stock will have a good deal of poultry to dispose of, especially if he follows my advice in this book to keep pullets, principally, for layers. It will be quite a problem to dispose of this stock to the best advantage. In passing I would remark that the poultryman should keep his own table well supplied. Plump and juicy broilers and roasters are just as good for him as they are for any one else. There is no reason why the poultrymams table should not rejoice once a week with broilers or roasters. During the summer there is in most towns a good market for poultry. The poultryman should steadily cull from his flock, and about moulting time have a grand "round up," selling the fowls for what they will bring — ■ except those he wishes to keep over for breeders. Quite a number of live cockerels may be disposed of among the farmers in the fall if the poultryman keeps a popular breed and will sell for a fair price. KILLING AND DRESSING FOWLS FOR MARKET. 1. Take the bird from the roost at night, 36 hours before it is to be killed, and shut it up in comfortable quarters. The next morning give it a good breakfast, but nothing more to eat after this until it is killed. Let it have all the water it will drink. The water -will add greatly to the fowl's comfort and assist in evacu- ating the bowels. The confinement is for the purpose of having the fowl at hand and of emptying the crop. 2. Suspend the fowl by the feet at a convenient height with a soft cord, the upper end of which is secured to a hook or nail in the ceiling or beam over head. 3. Lock the wings together behind the back, to prevent flap- pi ug. Do this carefully, so that they will not be dislocated. 1. Take the tip of the wings in the left hand, and with the right strike the fowl a smart blow on the head with a stick or cudgel. Strike hard enough to produce concussion of the brain and unconsciousness. 5. Grasp the fowl by the comb or by the feathers at the back of the head with the left hand, and with the right insert the blade 86 of a sharp knife in the neck jusi back <>! the ear lobe, on the under side of the neck bone and parallel with it. Run the blade clear through the neck. When you withdraw the blade twist it to right angles with the neck bone, severing the artery in the throat, and causing the blood to flow profusely. 6. Begin to pluck immediately. Pluck up the breast and side- to tail. Remove tail feathers. Unlock the wings, and strip them of long feat hers. Remove feathers from around vent. Pluck the feathers from back. Finish plucking. U' done quickly the feathers will come out easily and the .-kin will not be torn. 'I be bird should be entirely denuded of feathers in lt» minutes. In case rents are made sew them up neatly with white thread. 7. If the fowl is to l>e drawn, with a sharp knife cut a slit about an inch long back of the vent and parallel with it, through which insert index linger, hooking it into the intestines. Remove intestines. The lower end of the intestines and the egg sac may be removed by enlarging the slit in the shape of a half circle, until it joins the ends of the vent. This will make a round hole about the size of a silver half dollar. After removing the intestines cut off the fowl's head, then draw back the skin and take oil' about an inch of the nee!; bone, pull the skin forward and tie. 8. "For the Boston and New England markets the poultry should be picked perfectly clean. For the New York markets the tip feathers of the wings are left on. Do trot singe the bodies for the purpose of removing any down or hair, as the heat from the flame will give them an oily and unsightly appearance." !J. "Plumping is recommended by some dealers, and consists in dipping the carcass as soon as thoroughly picked lor Id seconds in water nearly or quite boiling hot. and then immediately into ice- cold water." This makes the meat look plump and tat. consider- ably improving its appearance. 10. "The laws of Massachusetts and New York do not require poultry to he drawn. In the former State, however, the crop musl be drawn if there is food in it at the time of killing. Custom,, which is quite as potent as statute law, requires that poultry mar- keted in .Massachusetts be drawn, and carefully drawn poultry will sell so much more readily and for so much better price- that it pays well to comply with this demand." TO SCALD A FOWL. Where the fowl is to he eaten at home. <>r where it is sold lor immediate consumption, many prefer to remove the feathers by 87 scalding. There is a righd and a wrong war to do this. The right way is as follows: Kill in the manner described in preceding sec- tion. After the blood has stopped dripping from the wound take a wooden pail, or some other receptacle, fill it three-fourths full <>f boiling Mater, and into this pour a pint of cold water to reduce the temperature a little below the boiling jpoint. Take the fowl by the neck and legs and dip it into the water twice — once w ith the breast downward and once with the hack — getting it in and out of the water as quickly as possible. Hang the fowl \\\) again, and begin to pluck. When the feathers have been removed and the intestines drawn, dip out two quarts of water from the pail, putting two quarts of boiling water in its place. Put the carcass into this, and let it stay 10 seconds, then take it out and put it in water nearly if not quite ice cold, letting it stay 10 minutes. This, as has been explained, is "plumping,"" and gives the carcass a very plump and inviting appearance. Put a tahlespoonful of salt into the cold water at the same time the fowl is put in. Hang up the fowl in a cool place until it is to be cooked or sold. Fowls treated in this way present an excellent appearance, and will keep several days without discoloration. PACKING AND SHIPPING. "Carefully sew up all rents or torn places on the skin, wash clean in cool water, wipe dry and hang in a cool place until the animal heat is entirely out, before packing. Pack in clean barrels or boxes with clean straw, as follows: First a thin layer of straw and then a layer of poultry in the same posture in which they roost, then a layer of straw and another of poultry, and so on until the barrel or box is quite full, finishing with a layer of straw, which should be tucked firmly into any crevices in the sides. Nail the comers or head on securely, and mark carefully with the name and addi ess of the dealer to whom you ship, not forgetting your name and address as shipper, and notify the dealer by postal or letter that you have shipped him one or more boxes or barrels of dressed poultry by freight or express, as the ease may be. Always take a receipt from the freight or express agent, and ship so as to reach the market not later than Friday.'* SHIPPING FOWLS ALIVE. The great majority of fowls that are sent to market are shipped alive. Commission men prefer them in this way. They can kill 88 them m lots as desired, and can dress them to suit the fancy or caprice of their customers. The Jews, who are now a large and important element in our cities, will not eat fowls, unless they are killed by a rabbi, and this makes a constant demand for live poul- try. Fowls are generally shipped by express in old strawberry crates or small light boxes of some sort. Before being sent off they should be given all the whole corn they will eat and be watered. Commission men are continually sending out circulars soliciting shipments. Some of these men are reliable and some are not. In general it may be said that it is safe to make consign- ments to firms that occupy stalls in public markets or who have heen in business a term of years. Men who have their offices or places of business in obscure quarters or who have lately started should be investigated. If they are all right the investigation will v being placed over a slow lire in a small pot set in a larger one — the larger po1 being filled with water. Add live gallons hot water to the mixture, stir well, and let it stand a few days where no dirt can get into it. Apply hot. One pint of this whitewash will cover one square yard. Coloring matter may he added as desired. For cream color add yellow ochre; for pearl or lead color add lampblack or ivory black; for fawn color add proportionately four pounds of common lamp- black: for common stone color add proportionately four pounds of iaw umber to two pounds lampblack. A Field Near Home. — The man who does not have the capital to engage in the business on a huge scale, or who does not feel com- petent to compete with breeders of established reputation, may largely increase his profits by imitating their methods within a lim- ited area. Farmers are waking up to the importance of keening thoroughbred stock. The average farmer does not feel that he can afford to pay $2 or even $1 for a sitting of eggs, hut he will gladly pay 50 emit-, 'the man who introduces a new and promising variety into his neighborhood, or who has a strain of any estab- lished breed noted lor egg production, can count on a large sale of eggs for hatching around home. It is more profitable to sell eggs to the farmers for 50 cents a sitting than to sell them for double that -inn to customers out of town, for in the latter case there is the expense for advertising and baskets, the time consumed in packing the eggs and in correspondence. How to Break Up a Sitting Hen. — Don't be in a hurry to break up the sitting hen. She has laid long and well and needs a vaca- tion before she starts in again. If it is summer put her out of the house and yard and let her forage for herself a few days. If it is winter or spring, put her in a pen built for broodies, give her a light feed of mash for breakfast, nothing for dinner, and the same for supper. Give her all the water she will drink. In a week she will bo cured ami come back to the (lock with a good appetite, and in another week she will begin to lay. 'the philosophy of this method is that the scanty ration makes the hen uneasy and she for- get- her desire for incubation. It won't hurt her to go a little hungry for a l\^w days, for if she is in a condition to sit she has stored up plenty of fat and it will do her good to consume some of it. It is a fact not generally known that where no nest eggs are \[^d and where the eggs laid are gathered two or three times a day, 95 hens are qo< nearly so likely to gel broody as they are when they feel a clutch of eggs under them every time they go on the nest. The two requisites of success in the poultry business are brains and pains. The poultryman who expects winter eggs from immature or stunted pullets is going to be badly disappointed, it requires good food, good care and a good, steady growth from shell to maturity to develop winter layers. A SETT1N' HEN. When a hen is bound to set, Seems as though 'tain't etiket Dowsin' her in water till She's connected with a chill. Seems as though 'twas skursely right Givin' her a dreadful fright. Tyin' rags around her tail. Poundin' on an old tin pa'l. Chasin' her around the yard. —Seems as though 'twas kinder hard Bein' kicked and slammed and shooed 'Cause she wants to raise a brocd. I sh'd say it's gettin' gay Jest 'cause, natur' wants its way. --While ago my neighbor, Penn, Started bustin' up a hen; Went 1o yank her off the nest, Hen, though, made a peck and jest Grabbed his thumbnail good and stout, —Liked to yanked the darn thing out. Penn he twitched away and then Tried again to grab the hen. But, by ginger, she had spunk, 'Cause she took and nipped a junk Big's a bean right out his palm, Swallowed it, and cool and calm Histed up and yelled "Cah-dah!" — Sounded like she said "Hoo-rah!" Wal, sir, when that hen done that. Penn, he bowed, took off his hit, — Spunk jest suits him, you can bei- "Set," says he, "gol da v n ye, SET." — Holinan F. Day in Lewiston Journal. 1905 INDEX American Breeds Best 42 B Best Sexed Birds 48 Breeding for 200 Eggs 56-6 1 Breed from Best Birds 67 Brooder, Care of 68 Brooder, Install One 66 Brooder, Removing Chicks to 67 Brooder, Secrets of Success with 67 Brooder Chick;?, How Author Feeds. . 68 Brooder Cnicks, Another Man's Way . . 69 C Carbohydrates 34 Chicks and Their Care 66-71 Chicks, Diseases of 73 Chicks, with Hens 70 Chicks, When to Hatch 71 Cholera 76 Colds and Bronchitis 74 Colony Plan 8 Community Plan 9 Colony-Community Plan 12 Crop Bound 77 Crosses 58 D Diarrhoea 73 Diseases, Causes of 93 Diseases, the More Common 72-80 Drinking Water 24 Dust Bath 22 Egg Eating 79 Egg Fo r ds and Tonic 43 E^gs, Feeding for 25-33 Eggs in Fall and Winter 41-45 Egg Production, Conditions of 6 Egg Records, How Wrecked 5 Egg Type 7 End of 200 Egg Hen 85-88 Exercise 22 Fats Feeding, a Woman's Way Feeding, Caution Feeding, Golden Rule for Feeding, How Much Feeding, Summer Method Feediog, Variety Necessary Feeding, Winter Method. Foods and Food Values G Grit, Charcoal and Oyster Shells. . Green Foo^l H Hen Persuader, Mr. Fox's Hereditv Home of 200 Egg Hen 8 35 32 29 BO 26 29 28 27 -40 23 37 44 4 17 Incubation, Artificial and Natural. . 61-65 Incubator or Hen 61 Incubator, Get a Good One 62 K PA<& Killing and Dressing 85 L Leg Bands 61 Lice an Tes'ing Eegs 65 Toric, A Good 78 Thint;«to Bear in Mind 37 Trap Nest and Its I>es 52 55 Two Hundred Egg Htn 3-7 V Varieties, How Many 5' Veimm, to Rid House of 21 W Water Test 65 Winter Egers fiom Pullets 41 Winter Eggs, Feeding for 43 Winter E>;g^. Not Fertile 60 Whitewash, Government '..... W, Y Yard Poultry 25 Gardner & Dunning's BARRED PLYMOUTH ROCKS Have Won More Prizes at New York and other large shows since 1898 Than Any Other Strain In America. Over icoo fine breeding and exhibition birds for sale. Our catalogue and mating list, giving full descrip- tion of stock and method of mating, and letters from many pleased customers, sent on request. GARDNER & DUNNING, M. S. Gardner, Mgr. AUBURN, N. Y. LE.AR.N TO Raise Poultry PROFI TABLY IF you raise poultry, "do it right". Make it pay as it should. Learn to avoid costly mistakes. Con- duct your yard, large or small, on established, money-making principles. Poultry Culture can be made to pay bigger dividends in proportion to invest- ment of time and money than any other branch of farm industry. It offers equal opportunities to women and men. Complete success comes with thorough preparation . Our correspondence course of instruction will make you an expert. The lessons are sent you regularly to your home . The benefits are immediate. Each student is taught individually. You can begin any time. NOW is the 3BBT time. Our teaching is an unqualified success. We make a business of placing graduates in good paying positions. No charge for the service . Many fine positions open at present. Qualify yourself for one of them . Write for interesting free literature. COLUMBIA SCHOOL OF POULTRY CULTURE, box 838, Waterville, N. Y. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 002 849 579 1 * Cyphers Incubator Co. GRANT M. CURTIS, President, Extends Greeting and Wishes Everybody ». Happy and Prosperous 1905. The past year (1904) has been by far the most successful and progressive in the his- tory of this company, and we have always m;ide it our business to "set the pace." We have made many important additions to our line and have materially improved all old patterns. "Competition is the Life ot Trade," and for the year 1905 we Challenge Competition both as to Quality and Prices. The New Improved Thermostat and Regulating Device of the 1905 pattern Standard Cyphers Incubators, is the high- est type of scientific self-adjustment, combined with durability and practical working value that has ever been applied to an incubator. You can't make it go wrong. It is set right in the factory and stays that way. The Patented Exclusive Features of Cyphers Incubators, enable us to positively warrant and guarantee all Standard Cyphers, Patent-Diaphragm, Non -moisture, Self- ventilating and Self- regulating Incubators. Sold under reg- istered trade-mark. The following guar- antee backs every sale made by this company or any of Its authorized agents : Incubators, Each. 1 QHC fl t .!ii«ft n (oa . That each and every Standard Cyphers Incuba- * ~ v <* V* WW* o-aticc: . tor w0 sen( j out w tfl (j satisfactory work in the hands of the purchaser, provided he will give it a fair trial, or it can be returned ! to us, witliiu niuty (90) days in good repair, less reasonable wear, and purchase * price will be returned < >»»»»«»»»» i nn 'i o mnm ^ mi rn » i mn »» im « » < »