The Eastern poultryman easternpoultryma45unse Year: 1903 72 THE EASTERN POU LTRYMAN THE EASTERN POULTRYMAN. FREEPORT, MAINE. Geo. P- Coffin, - Publisher. Published the 1st of Each month. Subscription Price 25 Cents per Year. ADVERTISING RATES. One inch, one insertion 75 One column, one insertion, .... $ One page, one insertion, $ Ten per cent discount on three months'insertion; 15 per cent on 6 months' insertion; 25 per cent on 12 months' insertion. Breeders'Cards, forty words or less. 40 cents; four times for $; one year. $; always in advance. Exchange Notices, one cent a w


The Eastern poultryman easternpoultryma45unse Year: 1903 72 THE EASTERN POU LTRYMAN THE EASTERN POULTRYMAN. FREEPORT, MAINE. Geo. P- Coffin, - Publisher. Published the 1st of Each month. Subscription Price 25 Cents per Year. ADVERTISING RATES. One inch, one insertion 75 One column, one insertion, .... $ One page, one insertion, $ Ten per cent discount on three months'insertion; 15 per cent on 6 months' insertion; 25 per cent on 12 months' insertion. Breeders'Cards, forty words or less. 40 cents; four times for $; one year. $; always in advance. Exchange Notices, one cent a word, eacn insertion. XA blue cross marked here denotes that your subscription has expired. Send your renewal at once, as your prompt attention insures that you will not miss any numbers and will thus be enabled to keep your file complete. We discontinue all sub- scriptions unless renewed promptly. Write your name in full, giving post office address plainly, so there will be no mistake. Make all remittances payable to GEO. P. COFFIN, Freeport, Maine. The columns of this paper are open to communica- tions concerning anything in which our readers may be interested. Contributions and questions on Poultry topics are solicited, and our readers are invited to use the paper as a medium for the exchange ol ideas of mutual interest. FEBRUARY. 1903. The Trap Nest Story. We publish in this issue a story entitled 'Trap Nests,' which we trust will inter- est and amuse our readers. The experi- ences of Mr. and Mrs. Aiken are similar to those met by many others who look upon the poultry business as one in which no skill or knowledge is required, and so venture in without any prepara- tion, and later find to their sorrow that 'things are not what they seem.' The subject of trap nests has probably been more misunderstood than any other in which poultry keepers are interested. This misunderstanding may be due to the prejudice which opposes every new nvention. Skepticism retards progress, and unti


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