American poultry world . n. Life Member National S. C. Buff Orpington Clob. Buff Wyandottes Closing Out Sale BUCK HILLS GREAT WINNING AND LAYING STRAIN «I All selected birds, 70 Hens, 10 Cocks, 150 Pullets, 25 stock less than one-half their value. A. few grand Cocks,Hens and Cockerels in White Wyandottes to spare. Write today Buck Hill Poultry Farm, James G. Rugh, Manager, Buck Hill Falls, Pa. Americas Best Wyandottes GOLDEN, SILVER AND WHITE ?^^INNERS of over 200 premiums at Madison Square Garden, also hundreds of premiums at St. LouistWorlds Fair, Chicago, Buffalo, Cincinnati,
American poultry world . n. Life Member National S. C. Buff Orpington Clob. Buff Wyandottes Closing Out Sale BUCK HILLS GREAT WINNING AND LAYING STRAIN «I All selected birds, 70 Hens, 10 Cocks, 150 Pullets, 25 stock less than one-half their value. A. few grand Cocks,Hens and Cockerels in White Wyandottes to spare. Write today Buck Hill Poultry Farm, James G. Rugh, Manager, Buck Hill Falls, Pa. Americas Best Wyandottes GOLDEN, SILVER AND WHITE ?^^INNERS of over 200 premiums at Madison Square Garden, also hundreds of premiums at St. LouistWorlds Fair, Chicago, Buffalo, Cincinnati, Columbus and Cleveland. 1,500 head of fine birds tospare, including 300 head of our last seasons breeders, many grand cock birds among them at you want fine show birds or the best of stock birds, I can fit you out with size, shape and color atreasonable prices. Also Golden and Silver Sebrights, and Collie Pups. IRA C. KELLER. Brookside Farm, Box 2, Prospect, Ohic 188 AMERICAN POULTRY WORLD January, igi>. Fig. IV, Silver Queen, first pullet at MODERN SILVER WYANDOTTESJ. H. Drevenstedt (Continued from page 156) males with finely striped hackles andsaddles and a breast and wingbars thatwere of the real Sebright kind. succeeded in getting thehackles and saddle striping most ad-mirably, but the lacing of the breastand body feathers, as Fig. II. willprove, was too heavy, and the whitecenters were rather small. The wing-bars were also too heavily laced. Theletter Mr. Crocker wrote us in Feb-ruary, 1895 referred to this subjectas follows: From information derived fromcorrespondents and through othersources I am led to believe, thatthe practice of mating to secure largewhite centers in the plumage of SilverWyandottes, is in danger of beingover-done. Many fanciers do not seem to un-derstand that the Standard only re-quires the plumage of the breast tohave large centers, while that of theback should have medium ones, butendeavor to breed large centers onback an
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