A mi LIVE RATIONS GIVEN TO HASTEN NEW FEATHERS PRACTICAL POINTS FOR FILLING A SILO the ii LOSS OF FAT IN SKIM MILK VJr'V w , it- '. : "- - hv PRIZE WINNING. COLUMBIAN PLYMOUTH ROCK COCK. Hens must finish molting beforo cold weather start3 or they will not lay In the winter months- Because of this fact a special combination of feed should be given to hasten the growth of the new feathers, according to Ross M. Sherwood of the department of poultry husbandry in the Kansas State Agricultural college. Use Linseed Oil Meal. "Sour milk and beef scraps are use ful at all seasons," says Mr. Sher wood, "but linseed oil meal Is espe cially good at this time. There are " certain food materials in oil meal which are needed In feather building and which are not found In the other feeds mentioned. Practical feeders of ten point out that oil meal loosens FOWLS IN WINTER Make Profit From Rock During Extremely Cold Weather. PREPARE FOR HENS' COMFORT All Immature Pullets Should Be Sepa rated and Forced for Development or Fattening Make General Cleaning Up. i The showing that the hens jnake during the severity of winter, is a good index of the person handling them. Spring is the natural laying .season, Nature usually lends aid for the ha 'ching and rearing of chicks from March until October, but winter and late fall . finds the hen en- -tlrely dependent upon her owner so rar-&3thQ profit she will pay Is "on cerned. The careful farmer or poultry , man makes a profit from the flock during the cold weather and prepares the way from the time the eggs are selected In the spring until the snow " begins to fly by selecting eggs from tested winter layers, keeping as win ter producers only well developed pul lets and healthy, energetic young hens by preparing for their comfort in the fall before the rigors of winter set in. Granted that one has these well ma tured pullets or hens that are young enough to be profitable If held over for another year, the problem of win ter eggs Is not so difficult. No pro ducer on the farm responds more readily to good care than the heD and the cow. Begin Culling Now. In order to get Into winter quarters with the best possible prospect, cull ing should begin now. All immature pullets should be placed to themselves and forced for development or fatten ed for market and all extremely old - hens had best be prepared for the pot. Cockerels Intended for next season's breeders should be separated from the others and a general clean up made of all surplus slock. It is possible that it will be more profitable to hold some or all of the surplus for a better mar ket but they shotdd at least be separated from the winter flock and the latter placed in permanent quar ters early. It is remarkable how well a little flock of HO or 100 hens and pullets will pay If well attended. The housing need not be elaborate or expensive. The feed is nil at hand on the average grain farm and no one need worry about protohls or ash or balanced ra tions. Give the hen something to bal ance and she will do the work for herself. Make Needed Repairs. If your house Is In need of repair, begin npw In your spare time to repair . it. Patch the roof If it leaks. There are usually enough odds ami ends around the farm to fix it. If it has wnl! ei t fmliler nroiinrl thre sides of it. leave a part of the south or east lde open and make a frame covered with cheese cloth or some other light material for extremely cold and stormy days. Fill in a dirt floor four or five inches higher than the surrounding yard. Clean out the old nest boxes and spray the wall and parches. You will have made a nice start toward winter eggs when these thlugs are ac-eowpllshd. ' Vr ft the-old feathers. This may be the re-, suit" of the rapid growth of new feath ers caused by food materials contain ed in the oil meal." Ration for Molting Season. The following ration is recommend ed for the molting season : GO pounds of corn chop, CO pounds of wheat bran. 20 pounds of meat scraps, and 15 pounds of old process oil meal. This is fed In combination with a scratch ing feed made up of two or more of the cheapest grains locally. After the fowls have completed the molt and are well feathere., this mash may be given: 60- pounds of corn chop, CO pounds of wheat bran, 30 pounds of wheat shorts, and 20 pounds of meat scraps. WHAT KILLS FARM CHICKENS Character of Animal May Be Pretty" Well Determined by Condition of Fowl When Found. - We may pretty well determine the Character of the animal that visited our hen house by the condition of the fowls as found. A mink will slaughter a dozen or more birds In n night, biting them in the neck and sucking the blood. Doth the mink and the opossum leave the carcasses in the coop or house where they found them. Rats drag their prey into the holes orrunways. ItatS. however, very sel dom attack a half-grown chicken or a fowl. Their appetite is more for the youngsters, so the front of each coop should be closed with a wire-covered frame, which keeps out the rats and permits ventilation. - Cats and foxes carry their victims away with them; the cat, like the rat, cares only for the baby chicks, seldom doing damage to birds that weigh more than a pound. The skunk Seems to select poultry for his diet only as a last resort. He prefers refuse meat or scrap. If any of the latter is found he will fill up with it and then retire to his den. The next night he will return, and In case the refuse meat or scrap is Insuf- ficient to satisfy his appetite, he will top off on poultry. The weasel crawls on the roost, se lects his victim, taps a" vein and sucks the blood. The weaseljs a regular contortionist, and is able to so con tract his body that he can wedg through the smallest opening. EGGS PURCHASED BY WEIGHT Custom Is Growing and Seems to Be. Only Fair Way Light Brahmas I Lay Largest Eggs. . ' The consumer of eggs knows that there is considerable difference In size of eggs. As a general rule a dozen eggs may mean very little as to thT amount of food contained. The custom of buying eggs by weight rather than by the dozen Is growing. Really this Is ihe only fair way to sell or buy. There Is considerable variation in the size and weight of eggs. This va riation is more among individuals than among breeds yt there is a relative standard for the breeds. Light Brah mas lay the largest eggs, the relative nverage being 28 ounces per dozen. Eggs of P.laclc Langshangs 'and P.arred Plymouth Rock hens weigh a . little over 20 ounces per dozen. The weight of eggs laid by . Single Comb Brown Leghorns, late-hatched Plymouth Hocks, White Wyandottes and Buff Cochin hens ranges from 21.7 to 24.7 ounces per dozen. The eggs of Peking ducks are heavier than those laid by hens, the weight of duck iggs being So.G ounces per dozen. DETERMINE PROFIT ON DUCKS An Exoeriment Found . That Fowls Twelve Weeks Old Required 3.18 Pounds of Feed. in ah experiment to determine the profit on ducks hatched in Incubators, reared in brooders, and sold on the local market at from ten to twelve weeks old, 3.18 pounds of feed per pound of gain were required, the aver age weight at the end of ten weeks being four pounds, 1L2 ounces pr duck. Y y Farmer Using Separator Should Pay Close Attention to Matter Chief i Cause Is Speed. livery fanner who lifips n spnnrntor I to skim his milk should give close at-; lention to see that he does not lose fat in the skim milk. A small percentage of fat going into the skim milk contin uously means a great loss for the year. If n cow gives 5,000 pounds of milk and four tenths of one per cent is lost, it would mean for the year a loss of about $8 per cow. There may be many causes to pro duce such a loss. Probably the chief cause Is the speed of the bowl. If a separator Is turned too slowly the milk does not skim clean and fat goes over into the skim milk. Another cause might be the temporal ure of the milk. For close skimming milk should be 8", degrees or above. Still another cause is an unbalanced bowl. See that the separator gets plenty of oil when run ning and do not neglect it when it gets out of order. MAKING IDEAL DAIRY RATION j. Silo Solves Succulence Problem Best Roots Should Be More Generally Fed to Cows. It Is very necessary that succulence oe supplied if we hope to come any where near an Ideal dairy ration. The silo solves this problem best. From all points of view silage is to be preferred. The - second choice would be roots. These will be very satisfactory, either when fed alone or supplementary to the silage, and should be more gener ally fed than at present on all dairy farms. Lacking either of these, it will be Important to secure similar effects through the grain ration with the aid of alfalfa or clover if available. In this connection oil meal Is of great value because of Its well-known laxa tive properties coupled with its high protein content. BUILDING UP A DAIRY HERD Care and Feed of Calves Is of Great Importance Select Best Marked Females. . Select the best marked female calves from the tested and most pro ductive cows. Let the calf remain with the cow for eight to ten days or until the cow's milk Is fit for human food. Feed sweet skim milk heated to blood heat; about "one to two quarts may be given morning and evening. Have a clean tin feed bucket; disease and no end of germs may be found In dirty buckets. Feed every day and set out Ip the sun and air. Feed sweet milk; it should always be fed warm ; cold and sour milk will produce scours and diarrhea. After Good Foundation Stock. the second week a-little oatmeal and a small quantity of flaxseed oil meal ! after it is boiled may be added to the milk. Tie a little bunch of bright, sweet clover hay in the pen every day for the calf to nibble. After the milk has beed fed put a little meal In the calf's mouth. A little hay may also be given. By this method the calf will soon leurn to eat meal and hay. Whole oats and wheat bran may be fed In small quantities after the sixth week. All stock, j'ouug and old, thrive and keep in health when well fed and kindly treated. CHECK GROWTH OF BACTERIA Milk Fresh From Cow Should Be Chilled at Once to About Fifty Degrees Fahrenheit. Cooling milk immediately after milk ing checks the growth of bacteria and thus prevents the milk from spoiling. Hence milk fresh from the cow should be chilled at once t about 50 degrees Fahrenheit and kept at that tempera ture until delivered. SILAGE NECESSARY FOR COW Thirty Pounds Per Day Is About Right It "Won't Hurt to Give Her All She Will Eat. - About 30 pounds of silage per day is required by the dairy cow, while a beef animal will consume one-third more, or possibly a still greater amount. It will not hurt a cow to feed her all that she will consume if the silage Is good and Is fed regularly. i MENACE TO DAIRY INDUSTRY Difficult to Estimate Cost of Contagi ous Abortion Each Year Breed ers Are Secretive. Tuberculosis is a dread disease, and its ravages are a heavy burden on the live stock industry. The loss that it entails, however, is not so much to be dreaded by the live stock men as the losses caused by contagious abor tion. It Is difficult to estimate just what abortion costs the dairy industry each year; breeders are very secretive about its presence in their herds; losses are taken quietly and nothing said. Many, too, have contagious abor tion to deal with and are not aware of it. It is not necessary that a cow actually abort to prove that the dis ease exists. Sterility, Irregular heat and retained afterbirth, are nil sym toms of con tagious abortion. Too of ten, too, an abortion is explained as the result of an accident or strain, and the dairy fanner lulls hlmnelf into a feeling of false security. The first essential toward eliminating the dis euse from the herd is thnt we be honest with ourselves and roognlze that the disease exists. Eternal vigilance is the price rr" free dom from this disease. BLANKET FOR LITTLE LAMBS When Animal First Comes Into World He Is Weak and Puny and Needs Some Froiection. ' The poor little lamb Is up agamst it when he first comes into the world. He is weak and puny, and the chances are he feels chilly and he may take a cold that will end fatally and result In a loss to you. Be on the safe side by wrapping him up in one of the blankets shown in the accompanying Blanket for Lambs drawing. It is attached by straps which pass under his belly and also by one which fastens around his neck. The lamb will be grateful and so will you when he deVelops into a big rascal Worth quite a few dollars on the mar ket. FEEDING PIGS FORAGE CROPS Greater Returns Made Than From Animals Fed in Dry Lots Al falfa Given Highest Rank. Pigs fed on good forage crops will make many times as much profit as those fed in dry lots. The accredited gain in pork to an acre of forage varies, depending upon the crop, the age of the hog, aud amount of grain fed. An acre of sweet clover, with corn at $1.J50 rnhj hogs at $15 a hundred, netted $42.07; rape, $37.50; alfalfa, $G5.90, and. a combination of oats, peas and rape, $64.00. Of all forage crops, alfalfa is the great permanent crop, while rape is the emerge' cy crop, and green rye the full and early spring crop. The ideal forage crop should show adap tability to soil and climate, perma nency, palatibillty. reasonable cost of planting, and good pasture at any, time during the growing season. Al falfa, clover and rape have most of these qualities. MANY FARMERS HORSE POOR Four Animals Are All That Is Needed to Work Quarter Section One Should Be Brood Mare. .Too many farmers are horse poor. They hnve not only too many horses but horses which are not good. In farming a quarter-section cf la. d there is no need for more thao fewr horses. Three of these should be heavy horses and one should be an animal heavy enough to Uo considerable work yet light euough to do Un family driving. Of these heavy horses at least one should bo a good brood 5 mire. While practicing economy la r.t!:er respects, it is well to study the ecoi o 'ical use of horse flesh. PASTURE SHEEP IN ORCHARD If Turned in Early in Season They Gradually Accustom Themselves to Fallen Apples. Sheep, If suddenly fed an unlimited quantity of apples, would quite likely ekeko thcr.sel ves, or cveroat to such an extent that other disastrous re sults would follow. I'ut, if turned in to the orchard early in the season, they will gradually acc stom them selves to the small apples as they grad ually fall from the trees, and no harm ful results follow. Cows and hogs are equally useful, provided the trees are in such a condition, and of such a shape that the snl.nals will not hana them. USING PERPENDICULAR ' (Clemwon College Bulletin.) Distributing and packing silage in the silo is frequently neglected. Un less the blower lias a distributor at tachment there Is a tendency for the cut corn to fall in one place in the .silo. If the stalks are frequently blown to the outside and the heavier parts, ears and butts of stalks, "are deposited in the center, this causes an uneven distribution of grain and stalk and a consequent uneven quality of silage. Uneven distribution is fre quently the cause of soft places and air pockets, which later result in spoiled silage. When the lighter por tions are blown to the outside they do not pack well and the silage spoils near the wall." Such spoilage, which really results from careless filling. Is often attributed to the silo. Packing Is Important. ' Tacking the silage Is equally as Im portant as distribution. "Thorough packing requires persistent work. LAi.iGS BORN IN FALL Such Animals When Ready for Market Bring Fancy Prices. Dorset, Rambouillets and Merinos Will Breed at Almost Any Season Open Shed Will Furnish Suf ficient Shelter. The term "winter lamb" has refer ence to lambs that are born In the fall or early winter and grown during the winter. Such lambs when ready for the market usually sell at fancy prices because they reach the market at a time of the year when choice, fat young lambs are scarce and in great demand, says D. A. Spencer, sheep expert for the department of animal husbandry of Oklahoma A. and M. college, Stillwa ter. To produce winter lambs It is neces sary to have the ewes bred In late spring or early summer, says Mr. Spen cer. If the ewes arc in good, thrifty condition and have access to plenty of good pasture, they will not need any grain until lambing time. Not a very large percentage of the ewes of the most desirable mutton type will breed eiuiy enough for winter lambs. The lorset breed is an excep tion to this, however, for the Dorset oh'ps will breed nt almost finy season of the year. Only-a small percentage of the tidy, popular Shropshire ewes will breed before ol weather In the fall. Merinos and Rambouillets, like Dorsets, will breed nt almost any sea son. If one has grrde Merino or Ham boulllet ewes that he does not care to mate with fine-wool rams, they may be bred to mutton type rams and the hunbs will be excellent for mutton. Nevertheless, during the hot weather thnt usually prevails in July and Au gust," only a small percentage of the ewes of any breed will come In heat. It is. therefore, wise to turn the rains with the ewes In May, or at least as early as .Tune, in order to get the ewes to breed before extreme hot weather. The period of gestation !n the ewe will average about one week less than five months, so th'ir ewes bred in May or .Tint' will hi nib in October fin I Novem ber, just when the weather is getting cool and almost ideal for himhing. The mild winters of Oklahoma afford the farmers of this state splendid op portunities for winter 'limb production, A sheil placed on well-drained land, opening to the south to admit sunlight, o built as to break direct drafts of wind, and with a good roi.f. will fur nish sufficient shelter. nrtmmPTr i-i nrtrt n r- rtr-.- CONCRETE FLOORS ARE BEST i Corncribs, Granaries, Poultry Houses ! and Chicken Coops Should Be Made Rat-proof. j Concrete floors may be built for new j corncribs and granaries smd - small mesh wire netting can he pui'-ed in the i walls. Old cribs and granaries, ehic!-? en c-ops iind poultry husc MioiY -rilso be made rat-proof. One of t?! food conservation suggestions made by ihe Missouri College of Agriculture is rnt-prooling eonu rids :m! granaries. A few years ago it was estimated that every rat on the fttrm est the farmer S1.X2 n year. With the present high prices of feed. seil and grain the cost will amount to much more than that. la most of the grain-growing states a fair estimate of the rat population of farm would be about "J-" end .t0. PIPE TO FILL SILO. fiood silage can be had only by uni form parking and Uniform distribu tion of the corn. The entire surface, especially the outer edge, should be packed firmly. The best help obtain able should be stationed in the silo. That is where the silage Is ultimately made, and success depends on the abil ity of the men to distribute and pack' the corn properly. Large Cutter Saves Money. The large cutter with the corre sponding large capacity frequently saves money in filling the silo, but it may result in a waste of the storage capacity of the silo. If the silo Is filled rapidly the corn has little time to settle. Slow filling allows the corn to settle as It" Is stored, with the re sult that more corn can he placed In the silo. To overcome the disadvan tage of rapid filling woven wire may be extended above the top of the silo, thus increasing its capacity until It can settle. MAKING MONEY WITH CATTLE Possibilities of Beef Production From Winter Grazing Shown at North Carolina Station The money-making possibilities of beef production from winter grazing have been demonstrated in a series of experiments conducted Jointly by the North Carolina "experiment sta tion and the bureau of animal In dustry. The cattle depended uiwn pasture for food during the winter months. The experiments covered a period of three years. Seventeen steers were used the first year, the nverage Inltiul weight, being C15.5 pounds. The final weight indicated a gain of 55.5 pounds each, and the total cost of wintering was only $4.88 per steer. For the second year 26 steers were used. The average Initial weight was 705 pounds, and the gain during 131 winter days was 17 pounds per steer. The cost of wintering each animal was $5.75. In the third year 16 ani mals made an average gain of 26 pound in 119 winter days; the cost for wintering being $5.30. When we take Into consideration the fact that wintering animals in this way, in addition to giving them gains, puts them In such condition that they will readily take on flesh in the spring and summer, it is a strong indication that this plan of handling them is a good one, ns there is nothing to lose. PIG RAISED WITH EACH COW With Exceptionally Good Cows the Number of Hogs May Be Increased Somewhat. Figure on raising one pig to market able age for each dairy cow and pos sibly one or two In addition for the house slops. With exceptionally good cows the number of pigs may be some what increased. Th's is, of course, where the cream Is sold, but the skim ini?k kept on the farm. MAKING MONEY WITH MULES Profitab'e to Buy Up Stock Animals and Feed Them Over Winter Let Them Run Loose. Any farmer who 1ms nn abundance of corn and roujrhnge can make money by linyinc up stork mules In the large markets and feeding them over winter. They should be allowed to run loose in roomy barns or li' -d and never con fined In stalls, as horses. SAVE EGGS FROM BEST STOCK Evidence of Grod Q'.;zlities When Fowl Reaches SOO-E Mark-Should Be Perpetuated. Kgus from 'he best hens should not lie eaten. When a fowl reaches the 2rtO-eKg mark In a season, it Is evf- donee of qualities which ought to be perpetuated. Kggs from this kind of stoek should into the incubator. f Keep Horre Doctor Busy. Maybe you think you can save tl me by feeding the horse enough in the morning to last nil day. That I n good way to make u job for a horse doctor. Encourage Pigs to Eat. A sma'l pen built close to the sow's pen. with a hole through which the nlsr j ,nn imss and eat grain bv themselves. i will encourage them fo et grnln much ' sonnc