If a rainy half-day should come along it would pay well to devote it to cleaning up the poultry house. The writer has visited several farm hen-houses during summer, and found almost all of them banked up below the perches with manure, and otherwise needing attention. A clean, sweet, whitewashed, henhouse on the farm would be a great and plensuit surprise for the (lock. And it would mean money for the owner, too. It is the sheerest folly for the dairyman to attempt to do business and not to know what each cow in his herd h doing in the direction of helping him. Few cows know anything about the theory of dairying, bat most of them understand the practical side of the business, and this is what counts.
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Bibliographic details
King Country Chronicle, Volume V, Issue 309, 5 November 1910, Page 5
Word Count
129Page 5 Advertisements Column 1 King Country Chronicle, Volume V, Issue 309, 5 November 1910, Page 5
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