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POULTRY HOUSE CONSTRUCTION. How to Halid » Good Poultry House nt Little Cost—The Ne cessity of Fresh Air—Keeping Mites Off the Birds. By Uncle Jo. N THE MAJORITY of Instances the novice in building poultry houses constructs them In such a manner as to cut off all possi- 1 bility of fresh air reaching the in- j terlor. Now, fresh air is the very essence of life, not only to the feath- | ered tribe, but to all animal life. It j matters not whether you build your j houses for the purpose of producing eggs or for the rearing of youngsters, ventilation must not bo overlooked. The fresh air type of houses is by far the most valuable one to con struct, and is considered the bept for all climates. In the open-front house that faces the south, the fowls can be housed almost as comfortably In winter as In summer. In severe weather, a storm curtain can be dropped In front to break the wind and at the same time allow a free circulation of pure, fresh air. It has been found by medical science that In treating tubercular troubles the fre*h air treatment Is the most beneficial. We use the open front system nnd seldom ever have a rase of cold. It Is the closely con fined fowls that contract roup and colds. A House for Twenty Hens. A good-sired house for twenty or twenty-five fowls Is one 8x10, six feet in front and four and one-half at back, facing the south, on slightly elevated ground. If the conditions are not surh, then fill In the floor with six or eight Inches of dirt and : tramp. Have a door two feet wide at the left-hand corner, front, open- j Ing out. In constructing the front, j nail two ten-inch planks, lengthwise, j nt top and bottom. This will give! you forty Inches of solid front. Then over the opening tuck one-inch mesh poultry wire, and behind this, on the Inside, have a curtain on a pole that; can be dropped down, closing the opening in stormy weather. We keep Leghorns in such a house and have never had a frosted comb. The house should be free from cracks or knot-holes on both sides and back, for this would create a draft which would be Injurious. The nest boxes can be made of soap boxes. Do not nail them, but so arrange as to be taken out and cleaned when ever needed. How to Guard Against Mites. I use sassafras roosting poles, as they are almost, not quite, mite proof, but I make them so in this way: Cut them six Inches shorter than the length of the house, tack cleats on them two feet apart, and suspend them 21 to 3 feet from the hen house floor with No. 12 galvan ized wire. Draw the four ends of the wire together and form a loop, and fasten these loops to the middle roof rafter, thus making a swtnjz roost, almost vermin proof. To make assurance doubly sure, we tie small bunches of raw cotton around the wire midway between the roost and the roof and saturate thl« cotton about once a week with kero sene oil. and it is very few mites tha: ever bother our chickens. The whole thing is simple and effective, and costs but an hour’s work. We find that piano boxes, second hand, when we can get them, make the best houses for a cock and twelve hens. Boxes usually cost $1.50. and for $1.50 more, you can buy all other material necessary—roofing, hinges for door, and wire for front. Try it and see. A GOOD IIOMK-.MADK BROODER.I V Cheap Device by Which the Fnrm er Can Easily Cure for a Large Number of Little Chicks at this Season. Messrs. Editors: We made a num ber of brooders last year, after a very simple and Inexpensive plan that proved very satisfactory. They were easily operated, and we had very lit tle difficulty In keeping the heat at tho required degree. One good feat ure was the fact that they were fire less, and, therefore, could be placed anywhere in any building, or near valuable property without the least danger from fire. Our homemade brooders were made of boxes about two and a half feet long and two feet wide. In the rear end, for n space tho width of the box. and extending out eight or ten Inches, wo had an elevated Hecond ary bottom up about six Inches from the bottom The space beneath was left open with a little curtain of flan nel over the front, but from the front of the secondary floor to the top of the box It was boarded up tightly. The upper floor was stripped only, with an Inch or morn between each strip, and a piece of grass sacking was doubled, and placed over It, the sacking being tacked In tightly at each end and side. The next feature was a tank made of heavy sheet tin. It was six Inches high, and eight inches across, with an opening to receive a funnel at the top, and a spout outlet at the bottom attached to the outside of tho tank and so placed as to extend through s hole In the boxing and discharge on the outside entirely, a cork was used to stop the flow and hold the water. This tank, after being placed in the space indicated above the strips and the sacking, was pack ed about and on top with a mixture of crumbled leaves and sand, but none of the latter was beneath it The opening at the top for the funnel to be used in filling the tank was also spout-shaped, and extended up and so the tank could be discharged and filled from the outside without opening the brooder at all. Placed under a shed, each brooder could be operated very conveniently in any sort of weather. This heating apparatus, it should be understood, made the hover, or artiflicial mother for the chicks Of course, the water used was heated on the cooking stove In the kitchina at meal time, while the stove was heated up. In the front end of the box-brooder was a convenient clear space for feeding the chicks in clover hulls and other litter, with the little chick food of seeds and cracked grain which is best for young chicks. Wa ter was also placed in the same outer space of the brooder for them. We also had a little slatted pen. or run way, for the chicks of each brood, so there was no mixing of broods or chicks of various ages, and each bunch, being comparatively small, was healthy and made good progress in growth. With several brooders of this kind we brooded the hatchings of two in cubators, and of several hens each month that we would re-set; and we found them very satisfactory after we made our tinner understand that we wanted water-tight tanks, and not tanks simply welded together. This is one point to be watched very care fully in the construction of each brooder, ease there will be some dis astrous leaks. With two or three brooders of this kind, at this season of the year, near ly every farmer who reads this can double his hatching of spring chick ens if he will, by simply taking the first hatching from each hen, and re setting her for another turn, which may be done without injury to the hen. Then when the second hatch ing is off, the chicks may also be brooded in the brooders, and the hen put back with the layers. H. B. GEER. Davidson Co., Tenn. “There is no joy In life equal to the joy of putting salt on the tail of an idea." What the Munger System Means The “MUNGER SYSTEM” means the saving to the ginner of every golden moment during the 90 days of the cotton ginning season. It means the greatest turnout at least cost. It means heavy, durable con struction, no “freak features,' ’ or liability to break-downs and repairs. That is why through all the South the MUNGER is known as The Perfect Syster Among growers the MUNGER has earned the reputation of giving 1 U better sample and more profit; of fre- I quently improving sample suffi- 1 MSfe* ciently to cover cost of ginning. J gR Think how this prestige draws 1 Sn trade t 1 gfl. MUNGER System Gin Out- j I- fits give choice of Munger, Ig lilgRa Pratt, Winship, Smith and I -irR Eagle Gins. Full line o» I gttrrH-t- Engines, Boilers and cotton I rSffir working machinery. 9 Plans and estimate* free. 1 Catalogue on application. 1 1 CONTINENTAL GIN COMPANY | DqSx SlfmkekM, Ala. MameAla^Taae. I TOR rffmff chariom, n. c. SrMmnar, mam. ■ (K»r »part) H SEED RIGHT WITH “CHOCTAW"! Plants perfectly, corn, cotton, sorghum and all seeds at desired distances. S Steel frame. Double Pitman drive. Extra large seed hopper. Picker H w heel thoroughly separates seed, depositing it in a regular drill, not bunching. Makes chopping easier. Large seed plates. Perfect H dropping assured. Quickly changed from corn to xitton planting, H etc. Steel hood protects gear, thus preventing H clogging by trash. Hopper may be turned com- H pletely over, exposing all parts for examination, H oiling or emptying. Demand Avery's Choctaw H from your dealer. H Shall we mail you circulars H of our labor-saving imple- H merits? They are not an H expense, but a quick, big H dividend-paying investment. H ^B. F. AVERY & SONS, Inc., io«it»iiit, Ky. Atiwtt, 6«, mib^, tw, iuw w es ^ Cost of Hulling PEAS and BEANS 1 The Farquhar No. i hulls and cleans from 10 to 15 bushels of or beans per hour without injuring the pods. Operated by eitlie^^B hand or light power. Saves time and labor and is indispeiisableU^^H the large grower. Special Introductory price for the HrstH machine In each locality. H A postal card will bring descriptive catalog and full particulars of our liberal offer. Scud it to-day ; it menus money to you. ^^^k A. B. FARQUHAR CO., Ltd. Box 908, York, KING SPREADER TRY IT Distributes Lime, Ashes, Fertilizers, K FOR Bor.c Meal and fine Compost evenly from a OS. 100 lbs. lo 2 torn to acre In Three sizes, ■ clean* itself. Simple,beat made.We prove 3 TAKE our confidence by terms. AGANl/ KING WEEDER CO.. Richmond. Va. GET A SAMPLE AT NO MONEY COST P