American Fence, Catalog no27 . ed as a chicken or yard fence when not in use as a crib. , The Commercial Products of Corn The tremendous variety of uses to which corn is put, is illustrated by the following table, whichis continually being added to as new discoveries are made. There is no question but in the near futurecorn will become the most widely used and valuable of all cereals. Feed on the flour. Adulterant for wheat-flour. oil Sugar. Syrup. Jelly Glucose. Confectionery. Cob pipes. Cob
American Fence, Catalog no27 . ed as a chicken or yard fence when not in use as a crib. , The Commercial Products of Corn The tremendous variety of uses to which corn is put, is illustrated by the following table, whichis continually being added to as new discoveries are made. There is no question but in the near futurecorn will become the most widely used and valuable of all cereals. Feed on the flour. Adulterant for wheat-flour. oil Sugar. Syrup. Jelly Glucose. Confectionery. Cob pipes. Cob fuel. Lining for stalk matting. Many works on corn, its nature, history and future are written, but the most recent andcom-plete is Corn: Growing, Breeding, Judging, Feeding and Marketing, by M. L. Bowman and B. , Professors of the Iowa State College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts, Ames, Iowa. American Steel Corn CribsReady for Shipment. No. 50 Cribs are put up in one piece or 75 Cribs are put up in two pieces or sections, of equal length, but packed together in one roll. American Steel & Wire Company 21 American Steel Corn Cribbing Made of Heavily Galvanized, Triangular Mesh, Wire Fabric. Two-inch Spacing Between Cross Wires. Two-Strand Horizontal Cables. Famished in Six Heights. In rolls of 10, 20, and 30 rods On the preceding page we point out some of the ad-vantages offered by Steel corn cribs over wood. Thesesame advantages apply to Corn Cribbing. American Steel Corn Cribbing differs from the CornCribs in that it is put up in rolls containing 10, 20 or 30rods each, and can be cut up into different lengths, accord-ing to the manner in which it is to be used, while theCribs are cut to length as indicated on page 17. It is sometimes desirable to build a permanent crib (asper illustration below), and for such purposes the Cribbingis more suitable. In fact, it is adapted to c
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Keywords: ., bookauthoramerican, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookyear1915