. College and state . n-not be said that the parent is treat-ing the boy more fairly and square-ly than he does his daughter. Fig-ures show at the North DakotaAgricultural College in: Industrial Courses Boys Girls 1911-12 312 36 1912-13 256 49 1913-14 239 44 1913-14 230 27 1915-16 200 18 191617 185 19 Short Course Boys Girls 1911-12 244 26 1912-13 426 34 1913-14 314 24 1914-15 254 22 1915-16 369 31 1916-17 214 11 Whenever the daughter has beengiven equal opportunity with theson she has proven to the satisfac-tion of her parents that a shortcourse or industrial course is ofinestimable value to


. College and state . n-not be said that the parent is treat-ing the boy more fairly and square-ly than he does his daughter. Fig-ures show at the North DakotaAgricultural College in: Industrial Courses Boys Girls 1911-12 312 36 1912-13 256 49 1913-14 239 44 1913-14 230 27 1915-16 200 18 191617 185 19 Short Course Boys Girls 1911-12 244 26 1912-13 426 34 1913-14 314 24 1914-15 254 22 1915-16 369 31 1916-17 214 11 Whenever the daughter has beengiven equal opportunity with theson she has proven to the satisfac-tion of her parents that a shortcourse or industrial course is ofinestimable value to She comeshome with a broadened outlook andnew viewpoint. Not infrequentlyher economic value has surpassedthat of her brother. May the par-cuts then, as circumstances permit,give the young woman who hasbeen so faithful in the home, sobound up in the welfare of everymember of the household, this op-portunity for self improvement;this opportunity of preparing her-self for a life of greater usefulnessand u COLLEGE AND STATE Fixing Dual Type and Character in Red Polled Cattle Geo. Grout, 08 For more than three hundredyears the shire of Suffolk, England,has been noted for its rieh agricul-tural lands, for its dairy productsand its polled cattle of deep milk-ing heredity. East Anglia, the name appliedto the Norfolk and Suffolk area,is almost an island. Its cattle werethus, down to the early years ofthe eighteenth century, less likelyto be a mixture of breeds than inmost other parts of the early breed had a better reputa-tion for milk production than Suf-folks. Early writers describe themas an excellent breed carrying vastsubstance, and Dickson traces themto the cattle of the 6th which were supposed to bedescended from old time farm herdswere termed homebreds. Suffolk Character The original Suffolk cattle asknown in England early in theeighteenth century were polled,great milkers with large, loose ud-ders, creased when empty, milkveins remar


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectuniversitiesandcolle