. Turkeys, all varieties. Their care and management. Mating, rearing, exhibiting and judging turkeys; explanation of score-card judging, with complete instructions . d another of toms on the place atone time. When two or more flocks are brought in at thesame tipie they fight so they will not eat and do not fat-ten. I find it better to pay board for a few flocks onthe farms than to bring them together on the home could not raise all my stock at home and furnish pairsand trios not related, nor could I ship as I now do to thesame customers every year and insure a change of blood. To those


. Turkeys, all varieties. Their care and management. Mating, rearing, exhibiting and judging turkeys; explanation of score-card judging, with complete instructions . d another of toms on the place atone time. When two or more flocks are brought in at thesame tipie they fight so they will not eat and do not fat-ten. I find it better to pay board for a few flocks onthe farms than to bring them together on the home could not raise all my stock at home and furnish pairsand trios not related, nor could I ship as I now do to thesame customers every year and insure a change of blood. To those persons who have written me, asking if 1Ihink it will pay to raise turkeys, I can only say that Ihave never heard any one who has given it a fair trial saytliat it does not pay. Still I would not advise one to un-dertake to Iaise turkejs who is not vidlling or physicallyable to expose himself to all sorts of weather, both hotand cold. Turkeys must be kept dry while yoxmg andgotten early in the afternoon. How shall you succeed with turkeys? The best wayto succeed is to keep on trying. If you fail this year,get more in eai-nest and try again next . Across the A>^an(io Photo by F. L. Sewelt A flock of Black Turkeys and FaveroUes iu a quaint old French ^who have supposed the turkey strictly an American Fowl will study with interest the above illustration and the one on page 54. THE METHOD OF A SUCCESSFUL BREEDER Introduce New Blood Each Year—Keep Poults Dry And Free From Lice—Feed Carefully—Do Not Crowd MRS. H. R. SCHLOTZHAUER


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