Dollars and sense in the poultry business .. . D BY THE SCHOOLIt is a credit to anyone to possess one of these, and they are well worth striving for. WORTH FIVE TIMES COST Let me say in regard to your Poul-try Correspondence Course that it hasbeen highly satisfactory. I have noth-ing but commendation. After studyingand teaching agriculture, includingpoultry work, taking a state corre-spondence course, and reviewing sev-eral of the latest complete works onthe subject, I am ready to say, withemphasis, that your Course is worthmany times over the best library ob-tainable. I would not part with th


Dollars and sense in the poultry business .. . D BY THE SCHOOLIt is a credit to anyone to possess one of these, and they are well worth striving for. WORTH FIVE TIMES COST Let me say in regard to your Poul-try Correspondence Course that it hasbeen highly satisfactory. I have noth-ing but commendation. After studyingand teaching agriculture, includingpoultry work, taking a state corre-spondence course, and reviewing sev-eral of the latest complete works onthe subject, I am ready to say, withemphasis, that your Course is worthmany times over the best library ob-tainable. I would not part with the lessons for five times the cost if an-other set could not be obtained. Theinstruction is perfectly clear and pre-sented in an interesting manner. — Bills, California. HAVE HAD GOOD SUCCESSI completed the Practical PoultryCourse under your Instruction and havebeen putting into practice the facts Igot from you, in raising my own poul-try and looking after my neighborsflocks. I feel that Ive had good suc-cess —Geo. W. Morris. THIS JAPANESE STUDENT MADE GOOD Last year one of my neighbors bought some chickensof Tom Barons strain, paying big money f°r them, to makea good start. But he had no knowledge of Poultry cultureso I advised him to take lessons from your School, but hedidnt Seed me. So I ran a race with him. Please rememberthat my chickens were ordinary White Leghorns, while hiswere rap nested, over 200-egg layers. Both of us hatchedchicks at about the same time, but my pullets started tolav eggs over a month before his did. Also I sold over halfof my cockerels for breeders, while he sold none but ateun almost all of them. And now he says there is no moneyin chickens! This little story tells the great importance ofproper knowledge. Not only this man but some othershave made miserable failures.—Geo. S. Takata, Texas. Page Seventy-seven Dont Keep Poultry — Make Poultry Keep You


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, booksubjectpoultry, bookyear1922