. The open door to independence; making money from the soil; what to do--how to do, on city lots, suburban grounds, country farms, together with outline maps of all parts of the United States, irrigated regions, climates, cities, villages, market towns, locations and populations . at the cons\; useof iron, whether in natural chalyo-eate streams or given artificially,tends generally to intensify color,whether in legs, plumage, or yolksof the eggs. The most definiteeffect of food upon color generallyknown is in canaries, in which(or rather in some of which, forthe effect varies greatly in in
. The open door to independence; making money from the soil; what to do--how to do, on city lots, suburban grounds, country farms, together with outline maps of all parts of the United States, irrigated regions, climates, cities, villages, market towns, locations and populations . at the cons\; useof iron, whether in natural chalyo-eate streams or given artificially,tends generally to intensify color,whether in legs, plumage, or yolksof the eggs. The most definiteeffect of food upon color generallyknown is in canaries, in which(or rather in some of which, forthe effect varies greatly in in-dividuals) the constant adminis-tration of cayenne throughout thewhole period during which thefeather is growing converts a richyellow into very deep fact, coupled with the suc-cess of some breeders in showingrich, deep buff in the many buffvarieties of fowls which have be-come so popular since 1890, hasled many to the conclusion thatthe best specimens owe their finebuff color and other colors likethe bay of Golden Hamburgs,their richness, to special feedingeven more than to careful breed-ing, and color feed for poultryis occasionally advertised in thepoultry papers.—Wrights PoultryBook. GEESE AND DUCKSCONVENIENCES NECESSARY IN THIS DEPARTMENT OF POULTRY. Toulouse goose aod gaudeiw
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectagriculture, bookyear