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Show SS5S5SSSSS3r5;SSSS$5S5SSSSS Home and Fashions station 5S8SSSS$?S$SS$SS$ A A poppy-re- Stunning Hat. hat recently from Paris d Is of ft wide tucks, cession of half-incIs Coquelin in shape, with a big flat Charming Afternoon Toilette. h buffed crown and two wide flat for a brim. Between these flat brim puffs is a soft fold of pale gray chiffon. Attached far back on the left side with a gold buckle Is a huge pale gray ostrich feather that sweeps round the hat toward the front, finishing a little on the right To the left side, back of the jide. feather, is attached a fall of fle black Chantilly lace that droops over the back hair and upon the shoulders. In the center of the back is a double satin bow of black velvet ribbon, faced, an inch wide. This bow Is tied tightly in the center and from it depend two streamers of the velvet a good deal below the waist line. This hat is truly picturesque and is worn with a sumptuous carriage costume made of two shades of gray crepe de chine, with finishings of poppy red chiffon and black lace. Pongee jackets are quite new and are especially attractive. An example in the natural hue is embroidered in black silk floss. It is made with a yoke incrusted with black lace and a body. The sleeves are flowing and are finished at the border with lace medalions. The jaunty, narrow, turndown collar has the lace medalions and at the finish, at the front, are long streamers of black velvet ribbon, satin-facean inch and a half wide. jackets recently from Paris are shown in black crepe de chine, pale yellow Louisine silk and taffeta all these colors showing embroidery in black silk, with exception of the black crepe de chine, which is embellished in white silk floss. Good-Nigh- ished this makes a very attractive waist. chiffon made into close suc- t. Little boy sweetheart, with eyes that shine BIu as the skies on a summer morn, I.lpn that are wreathed in a smile divine. Velvety cheek that is pressed to mine. Life- has seemed fairer since you wa for The evidenced. tucks is clearly waist has a deep yoke effect of horizontal tucks alternating with Inset bands of black lace and below this the lace and tucks run lengthwise. A soft rosette of liberty satin ribbon Is placed at the left side. The elbow sleeves are trimmed with ruffles. The same idea is followed in the skirt which falls in very graceful and ar est quality and the preference born: Fold up your petals, my rosebud white. t. t, my baby, Good-nigh- t. Little boy sweetheart, I love you so! How deep that love you will never know. Night after night, when my work is through Worn out and weary I come to you. Bend o'er your couch till upon my ear Falls a faint music I yearn to hear. Made by your breathing so soft and light. t. t, my baby, good-nigh- Good-nigh- Good-nigh- t. Then by your side as I nightly kneel I make appeal. To the That He will guide you and guard and bless. Touch you with love and unselfishness. Mold you and lead you life's path along. That you grow manly and true and strong, That He may grant you a future bright t, Good-nigh- t, my baby, good-nigh- Goud-nigh- t. Pretty Party Trick. It is very easy to make a magic mirror. All you have to do is to write or draw with chalk on an ordinary hand mirror and wipe it gently with a soft cloth. The words or pictures vanish, but they will reappear if the mirror Is breathed upon. In telling fortunes with the mirror you must leave it In another room until It is wanted. Then, a question being put to you, go in quest of the mirror, write upon it (and rub off) an appropriate or amusing answer and take A -- d Box-plaite- d To Perfume Tresses. To perfume the hair get a piece of water lily Incense, which you can buy S any Japanese store. Light it, and tistic lines. Corticelll silk is used in as the fumes arise shake the hair the making of this costume. over it until the incense has all For earlier spring voile and silk burned out. This fragrance will last and wool material are very much a long time In the hair, and is only liked, embroidered, uni, spotted fainta suggestion of, perfume. Heavily ly or striped, in short in every form perfumed locks are in bad taste. and shape and color these delicate Cheap cologne or perfume is bad for fabrics still hold their own, the favorthe hair. A little dash of violet toilet ite color being a delicate yellowish-buf- f water will not hurt the hair and will tint shading to cream. Gray is give it a golden cast in the sunlight. sartorial always welcomed by the powers, just now a faint shade of A Dainty Theater Bodice. dove color predominating. There is With the signs of approaching another color in vogue in Paris at warm weather our heavy and much present which may also take here BATISTE. the mirror to your questioner and request him to breathe upon it If you are a good rapid draughts- semi-vacuu- man you can during your short sketch the face of a girls future husbanu on the glass, or If you have decided on your victim beforehand you can prepare the portrait at leisure. e Selling the Wind. It seems incredible, but it is nevertheless a fact, that as late as the year 1814 an old waman named Bes- sie Millie, of Pomona, in the Orkney Islands, sold favorable winds to seamen at the small price of 6d. a vessel. For many years witches were supposed to sell the wind. The Finlanders and Laplanders made quite a trade by selling winds. The old women, after being well paid by the credulous sailors, used to knit three magical knots; the buyer was told he would have a good gale when he untied the first knot, the second knot would bring a strong wind, and the third a severe tempest. At one time winds were sold at Mont St. Michael in Normandy, and arrows were sold at the same time to charm away bad storms. V To Win a Persons Confidence. While the art of winning peoples favor and confidence is, in many instances, a natural gift, like most of the goods things in life, it may be acquired by those who earnestly seek it The first step to be taken is to cultivate if you do not already possess it a uniformly cheerful disposition. A bright, smiling face will do more to incline a mans heart toward you, and gain his ear, than all the virtues of the calendar, handicapped by a gloomy visage. Be generous with your sympathy, and try to be at least as much interested in the joys and sorrows of others as you would wish them to be In yours. Success. With embroidered white and blue bastiste. Black satin belt. trimmed satin and peau de sole waists are found too uncomfortable and we long for lighter garments to A very dainty wear to the theater. waist Is of pale blue liberty silk over taffeta of the same Bhade and is trimmed with ribbon-rubeading. It has something of a bolero effect as the n among certain esprlts in coming modes. It is a very undecided shade of brown almost running to purple, a trifle heavy perhaps for wear in summer, but certainly acceptable for the variable "samples of weather we may yet be treated to. - Timely Fashton Hints. And how they do eat up material! Etamine tailors astonishingly well. Magpie combinations are in high favor. Some dress hats show lace Insets In the brim. Veils show either velvet or embroidered dots. Theres a piquancy about the tricorne chapeau. Nineteen-karatAlexandrite is priced at $1,900. Moire, satin taffeta and Louisine ribons trim hats. Cloth bands are effective on lace dresses for day wear. Broad-plaitebands are strapped onto some tailor rigs. In millinery the flat cabochons have succeeded the mound-shaped- . Narrow velvet ribbons trims gowns well in combination with lace. With the modish light-blu- e rigs are the best hat trimmings. Tucked gores, mitered together, form some stunning silk and crepe dresses. Liberty Silk Over Taffeta. If it be a foliage hat, however, a tower part consists of plaited chiffon smart knot of pale-bluribbon is in which blouses slightly over the belt. favor. An attractive chiffon jabot completes great Though broad tucks are not as the garniture. The stitching Is all as narrow ones, they have a Hone with Cortlcelli silk. When fin- - pretty certain style. Tobacco Bad For Boys. The effects of tobacco on the youth were recently presented by Dr. Herbert Fish of the Northwestern university in an address before the Cook A stuCounty league in Chicago. dent should quit using tobacco, said Dr. Fish, "or conclude In his own mind to leave school. Not a single student using tobacco has stood in the first rank this year, and this has been the case for the last nine years, with one exception. It is a fact that as the scholarship lowers the ratio of tobacco users increases. The Coin and the Card. Place on forefinger of your left hand held upright, a card; on the card place a coin. You can remove this card without disturbing the coin. To do this, you must flip the card forcibly with the middle finger of the right hand. The pastboard will oe ,' d forget-- me-nots , e . propelled across the room, and coin will remain upon the finger. n , good-nigh- Good-nigh- balloon four feet long and two foet wide, which she fastens to a tres by a single thread, then marches on Raising BlacK Langshans. board with her little ones, From the Farmers Review: I will cuts the thread and away goes the give you my way of raising black airship to some distant point ori the Langshans. I first purchased four prairie. pullets and a cockerel, paying $20 for the four pullets and $12 for the His Shortest Route. cockerel. From these the first year I got about 40 birds In all. The next year I changed cockerels again, and raised nine fine cockerels for the next year. I also bought six hne pullets. I bred black Langshans for six years before I ever made a show. In the year 1889 I made a show in Danville, Illinois, and won about half of the premiums, for which I showed, and saw my weak points. I kept on showing every year, my birds getting better all the time, and up to date I am on top. I hatched the old way with hens and let them take care of the chicks. I have ten acres for range, and each pen has a half acre upon which to run. Some people say they do not feed their hens while they are at liberty In the summer, but I feed my bens at that time all This is the shortest route by they can eat In the morning I feed which the landlord, in last weeks oats steamed. Wheat Is given at puzzle, may visit five of his ten noon and evening. I keep my coops houses twice and the other five once. clean. Corn Is not good feed for black Langshans. as It is too heating and hard on the plumage. Supposed Feat of Strength. Procure a piece of thin board of The only way to start in the busisoft wood, say pine; it should be a ness Is to buy good stuff and get foot and a half in length and a couple good stuff from it. It is hard to get of inches wide. Place it upon an or- good birds out of bad ones. When a dinary kitchen table, allowing the end man writes me for a $1.00 or $2.00 to protrude half its length almost be- bird I know he Is a cheap man, and yond the edge of the table, covering I would like to run up against him In the board to the edge, and smooth it a show room. At one time I won out carefully, being sure that the pa- first and second on cockerel, and a per is in perfect contact with the farmer came to the same show with board as well as with the table. Then 33 head; he never got a place. He announce to the Company assembled hung around my birds and the last that, with no other fastening upon the day of the show he said: Mayer, board than the sheet of paper, you what will you take for those two propose to strike the end of ihe board cockerels ? I told him $40, and he hard enough' to break It, or at least thought I was ready to go to the to tilt ' the table. It will appear Im- asylum. I laughed at him anu said: possible,. Every one will imagine that "I have sold $95 worth of eggs from the newspaper will be torn in two r.i those two cockerels, and they have Do soon as the end of the board is struck, also produced prize winners. but this will not occur. Strike It a you think they are worth $40 to me smart, sharp blow with the hand or or not? As a result of the work of an Instrument, and the board will those two cockerels I never lose a a show room. It is, howeither break off or tilt the table, and place remain fast to It, just as If It had ever, a good thing to have such been nailed fast. The explanation breeders as the man I have menis simple. When the blow is struck tioned, for they are willing to buy there is a tendency to tilt the end of many a bird that a good breeder the board upon the table, but the would not keep about the place. W. air having been pressed out from M. Mayer, Vermilion County, Illinois. under the paper a has No Poultry and Egg Trust. been created, and the compression of air upon the outer side of the paper There has been talk about a poultry holds the board fast. and egg trust. The thing is an absurdity at the present time, though it Puzzle Picture. may become a possibility in the future, if there shall ever rise a trust In farm lands. The cry of a trust was based on the probable fact that the packing companies had bought up large quantities of poultry and eggs and had stored them for a rise. It was simply a speculation on a big scale. The owners of flocks of hens are numbered by the milions and are too numerous to have their product controlled. Besides, under the stimulus of high prices to the farmers the numbber of fowls in the country could easily be doubled in a single year. Unfortunately at the present time It seems probable that the producers of poultry are not getting the benefit of the high prices being paid of poultry and by the consumers poultry products. If that be so, then the high prices the consumers are paying will not stimulate production, and the present very unsatisfactory state of things will continue. We would like to hear from our readers as to the prices they are at the present time receiving for their poultry and poultry products and a statement as to the prices they have received Who Have Succeeded. Boys Most of the great mercantile suc- In past years. cesses of the present time, says a Plum Trees in Poultry Yards. writer in the New York Times, had We often see the advice to plant relatively recent small beginnings. Merchant prince and captain of Indus- plum trees in the poultry yard. The try are not hereditary titles of busi- advice may he good or it may be bad. ness nobility. A majority of those The argument on behalf of the plum who bear them started life tree is that the hens keep it well poor and unknown; a majority of cultivated by scratching and keep the those who will bear them ten or fif- grass all down, permitting not a to grow. It Is further argued teen years hence are working blade s for wages or relatively small salaries. that the hens will pick up the as they drop to the ground. The successor of New Yorks greatest and richest merchant, with whom suc- Well, It may be a good thing to have cessful competition seemed impos- a plum tree In the poultry yard so sible, was an errand boy in a book far as the plum tree is concerned, but we doubt if It is of any value store in 1852. The most conspicuousto the poultry yard. The ideal poully successful of American manufactures and richest man in the United try yard Is not one that Is bare of States was a telegraph messenger in grass, but one that 1b covered with 1850. A majority of the men who are grass. In fact, the yards should be recognized as at the top y began arranged in pairs, so that when the at the bottom within the memory of verdure is being eaten off one yard It the present generation. Those who will be growing In the other. The will be at the top twenty-fivyears hen does not demand "clean culture. hence are apprentices, clerks, When the plum tree Is shaken and laborers, messengers or unknown the curculioa fall to the ground they do not lie there for an Indefinite petraders in a small way. riod waiting for the dutiful hen to come along and pick them up. In a An Astonishing Feat. If you possess a strong magnet you few moments they are up and away. can perform a very startling trick. The hens will have to be pretty well Hang up a sheet Draw on it with trained if they are to stand around pencil a hook. Immediately behind and snatch up the curculioa as they the sheet at the point where the hook drop. The theory of combining plums is drawn place your magnet Now and hens will, we think, hardly work tell yov friends that you can hang on In extensive practice. this hook a key or steel ring, or any Incubator Cellars. small Iron or steel object with a hole Incubator cellars are constructed In In it They will, of course, not believe you. a11 you need to do is to rarious ways, but however constructplace the steel or iron object over the ed they should be away from the picture of the hook and the magnet dwelling house and barns. They are will hold it The object will appear perhaps more likely to be fired than to have been hung on the hook. You are any of the other farm structures, can have a confederate behind the and they should be placed far enough scene remove the magnet and then away so that in case of fire the other ask any one to try to hang up the ob- buildings will not be Ignited. A simject He will, of course, fall. Then, ple method of constructing these celhaving given a signal to your confed- lars is to dig a deep pit and roof it erate, he will replace the magnet, and over, piling the dirt up to the eaves. The land must be, of course, peryou will operate the trick again. fectly drained. If there is any danArab Boys Play Marbles. ger of the land accumulating moisture The boys of Arabia have a curious r of the rains seeping through, it way of playing marbles. The marble would be well to use cement in the Is placed In the hollow between the bottom of the cellar and up the sides middle finger and the forefinger of as far as there Is any danger of the the left hand, the hand being flat on ingress of soil water. The benefit of the ground and the fingers closed. a cellar of this kind lies in Its perThe forefinger of the right hand Is fect temperature. This is a great then pressed firmly on the right joint thing in the hatching of chicks. The of the middle finger, which pushes the even temperature outside of the inmiddle finger suddenly aside and the cubators makes it more possible to even temperature within. forefinger slips out with sufficient keep an force to propel the shooter very One mans success Is often due to the failure of another. half-doze- - A charming afternoon toilette Is fashioned of cream voile of the soft- d CREAM - Feelings- the Webs Like Ropee. Spiders are met with in the forests of Java whose webs are so strong that it requires a knife to cut through them, we are told. A spider weighing four pounds, which has taken up her residence in a cathedral at Munich, regales herself with a large supply of lamp olL A Texas bpider weaves a to-da- y to-da- y cur-culio- to-da- e to-da-y The Ferments In .Milk. Prof. O. L. McKay, Iowa Agricultural College: In the month of June when nature has covered the earth with loveliness, the right kind of fermentation seems to be everywhere. Most anyone can make fine flavored butter at this time; but when the kind of bacteria that we have to deal with It changes to the undesirable kind. will then require skill. At our school our bacteriologist made a number of tests to determine the kind of bacteria that milk contains during the different months of the year. In March when It Is quite difficult to make fine butter. 100 samples from different patrons milk were taken. per cent showed pure acid Only 12 48 per cent Impure acid flavor flavor; and 39 per cent rapid decomposition of the curd. Samples taken April fla8th showed 50 per cent pure acid 23.3 and acid flavor, vor; 27.7 Impure curd. In rapid decomposition of the decided improvement found we April In the kind of oacteria present Sam90 per efflt ples taken May 10 showed 10 per cent Imand flavor acid pure It Is pure. This largely explains why easy to get good flavors at some times of the year and not at other times. Samples taken in June and July showed about the same results as May. Now if we could get our patrons to exercise more care In regard to cleanliness, a lot of this trouble might be obviated. Still at certain periods makers will have to combat undesirable fermentations. Protect the Cows from Fire. All dairy barns, creameries and the like should be as amply as possible protected against fire. This may be done In several ways. If no better way appears to the mind of the owner, he should have a shelf constructed in the barn and on It keep a number of palls full of water and ready to use at a moments notice. Frequently fires get beyond control because the means are not at hand for extinguishing them In their Incipient farmers have windstage. Where mills and elevated tanks that give a pressure to the water the arrangements for fighting fire can be of the best, but will of course cost somethlne- Water pipes should be good - laid to convenient points and hose made ready. The fire may never come, but It Is a comfortable feeling to know that If it comes It will get a cold reception. Where animals are kept tied or locked up and beyond possible escape from the flames precautions against fire should certainly be taken. Control the Water In Butter. A government bulletin says that the presence of salt, the size of the butter granules and the hardness of the butter are factors exerting an Influence on the amount of water In the butter. Where a dry butter is desired, as for export, these principles may have considerable practical importance. By churning cream at a low temperature and continuing the churning until the granules were as large as peas, washing for about thirty minutes with water at 45 degrees to 48 degrees, and working twice, the Iowa station secured butter containing as low as 6.72 per cent of water. Of thirty-twanalyses of samples of butter made in this way, seven showed less than 8 per cent of . water, 7 from 8 to 10 per cent, and 10 from 10 to 12 per cent. It is not, however, advised that export butter should be made with less than from 9 to 10 per cent of water. Farm Separators in Australia. It is interesting to note the favor with which the farm separator is received abroad, where It Is being used in increasing numbers. In Australia the little machines are being largely used. In Victoria alone there are now owned and operated on the farms 4,100 separators. According to the last report of Hon. John Morrisy, minister of agriculture of Victoria, the use of the machines has Increased as follows: 1886, 33; 1887, 58; 1888, 108; o 1889, 155; 1890, 238; 1891, 445; 1897, 2,125; 1898, 2,799, 1899, 3446. There are about 10,000 farmers In Victoria supplying milk to creameries, and of these at least 41 per cent separate the cream on their own farms. Hard Wheats Made Mltlable. F. D. Coburn: Kansas is virtually the only portion of America producing the famous hard red wheat in considerable quantities, in which as in many other things, the state is unique. The seed was first experimented with in some of the central counties nearly thirty years ago, being brought by Mennonlte immigrants from southern Russia, near the Black Sea, who apparently understood much better than Americans Its hardy productiveness and real value. For years following Its Introduction It was disparaged by American millers and grain-buyerwho claimed that its flinty character made It so difficult to grind as to materially lessen Its market value. Tne farmers, however, persevered in sowing it and the production steadily Increased, although they were compelled to accept In the markets from ten to fifteen cents per bushel below what buyers and millers were willing to pay for the softer and much better known varieties yielding considerably fewer bushels per acre. They persistently argued that tt was more profitable to raise a wheat that would reliably yield them, one year with another, from eighteen to forty bushels per acre, even though selling for but 75 cents per bushel, than to raise a crop selling for 80 or 85 cents per bnshel and yielding perhaps only twelve to fifteen bushels. This, in the course of a few years, compelled milera to devise ways and means for more successfully and economically converting this hard wheat into flour, and there were brought Into use d vices and processes for softening the grain by steaming and moistening before grinding. s, Miss Frances Beverly, colored, was recently awarded $75 damages In her suit against a theater company in Chicago, alleging that she was refused a seat in the house, although holding a ticket Cause of Scabies or Ma Scabies, or mange, of the o, contagious disease caused by eitic mite. Cattle are chiefly A with but two varieties of th sites, or mites, which belonTt! olass Arachnoldea. These Jr 8,' the Psoroptes; second, the The first Is the one which quently affects them, it livesalj surface of the skin and gtTfll great Irritation and Itching hy u and Is most frequent upon the i of the neck and Bhoulders, at th of the horns, and at the root talk From these points It Bpr the back and sides, and may 3 nearly the entire body. Itt prU manifestations are more or lea) merous pimples, exudation, anj dant scaling off of the skin, faille of the hair, and the formation scabs. In the coim time the skin becomes thickened,! wrinkled, and acquires the eon ence of leather. When maug spread over a large surface ol body, the animals lose flesh am come weak and anemic, rends them constitutionally less abli withstand or combat the effects o! mites. At the same time the creased vigor and lessened vltaliti the affected animals favor the a rapid multiplication of the mlta the further extension and Internj tlon of the disease. Thus veil cause and effect working togetr with the result that scabies, or mD In cattle may in some cases tal; especially are fatal terminal liable to occur in the latter putg severe winter among lmmatnrj J growing animals, or those of ady full age, when In an unthrifty gray-brownis- h irt.X.Schni ' Chicag' Iter tal out resu to take na. I e, 'Xai etite , 'erlng tha tlleve nick of fCtlons caf am 1 1 we enough t our debt Sded Pm i hbora a r that at I te Mt jver half It. kh tlon at the time of becoming Info There have been noticed variation the progress of the disease depe upon extreme seasons aggrai in winter alternating with lm; ment in summer. Buletln 152, D 1 form . ol ,, not ad t their gnibh cat been nai I ment of Agriculture. FRI Horse Shortage In New Ham Prof. Charles W. Burkett, at (Send Ot New I mpshire station, say3: pa too There is little horse pove al Vote the state to properly till and call d to i I one the soil. We have thousands at pril of tillable land In the state (and nj Is said here Is true of all New (Any one e one mkt land) that have not felt the pli ( laud share for a long series of years, nearest for decades, some for a half cent nearent kb nearest Soil will not remain productln nearest I nearest-n- tb untilled. We have not enough hi nearest or working units In the state te (tb nearest- the regular fart, work and to The vot on tillage as it should be dona Pa TOK vou tlcaliy the o ly supply of hone from other states; yet this state The offl A prom quite able to supply its full needs could have to spare for demands (investi g where. The work lies with the Agenl ers themselves, not only to li ap for i the number of working horses tatf improve them and make them n serviceable. By using the better grade of nr for breeding purposes and having t sire ot so: service of some pure-bredraft or coach breed of good type A conformation, it would be but a time until the character of the horse stock were changed Into a ter and Improved one. Good and coach stallions can be secured about five hundred dollars, farmers could purchase a stalling the type desired, and there could K A1 engaged several mares for the season at a moderate charge for vice which wouid pay not only i it rate for money Invested but wonldi a long ways for paying the full cost jl C 1 j d li Low-Heade- Trees. d The tornado of last week preset a sermon on the low heading of ig trees. The writer was in the ok ards of the University of Illinois It, next morning after the storm A found a large part of the apple an on the ground. He said to hlmse: The Dunlap orchards at Savoy Jv L. re me othe v sho be a profitless Investment this jm' as, without doubt, the 8,000 trees th have shaken oft most ot their apidat Great was his surprise, however, find that In the orchard of winter plea at Savoy (5,000 trees), the tat was Blight Here and there a tree it. been uprooted on the edge of Ik orchard, but In the main the tret were not only standing, but were Ml, ing their apples. The cause tor tb, immunity was apparent The tm, were all of them headed low, so ter, low that many of the branches toucte the ground. The wind could not g under the trees, but was throws S ward wherever it touched this W K lng forest The umbrella-shapedid not present good material k the work ot the tempest Evldwt little whipping was done by most the branches, compared to what wo, Ikii 6 $est hit hent Calf ' ,Nat ution ! thoet by W. L. d tre j have resulted to Riding through this orchard, 8, ator Dunlap said: There are W distinct advantages In low hesdlt of apple trees. First, the wind not so well whip the apples from ft trigs. Second, the branches protA the trunk against sunscald. Thirl, Is easier to spray the trees. Foort It Is easier to harvest the fruit objection to low beading Is tb we cannot so well get under the to to cultivate, but that is not s F matter, as weeds and grass do A grow very well In the shade anjrwA The objection does not by any mA offset the advantages I have ns After harvest Is over we will eenl man through here with a scythe s he will mow the few weeds that A found under the trees. high-toppe- d . Some of the citizens of Benton BA bor, Mich;, are proposing a plant, like those that are successfully run In some of the tX lsh cities. They would run the W Ulng establishment in connect with the city water works, and wo supply both Benton Harbor and A Joseph with pure milk. Friends the movement estimate the ans profits to the city at $20,000. t Chickens require no food whstet for 24 hours after hatching, as there sufficient nutriment in the egg U trin them for that time. iraa YO ,, V:.: PR! :d I |